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27 octobre 2013

Universities should ditch the talk of investing in the future

 

 

http://static.guim.co.uk/static/c55907932af8ee96c21b7d89a9ebeedb4602fbbf/common/images/logos/the-guardian/news.gifBy Simon Jenkins. Instead of research academics need to focus on giving students what they want for their money: that is, a well-rounded education. Money talks. After two years of tuition fees at £7,000-£9,000 universities are apparently rolling in cash, and their students are demanding value for it. Universities are expected to deliver not just education but jobs. Courses are being tailored to "employability". Research is concentrated in the elite Russell institutions. Now the universities minister, David Willetts, is calling for a "cultural change" to reverse the trend of too much time going on scholarship and not enough on teaching. Is this a new dawn in higher education, or a new darkness? More...

27 octobre 2013

London leads charge into higher education

 

 

http://static.guim.co.uk/static/c55907932af8ee96c21b7d89a9ebeedb4602fbbf/common/images/logos/the-guardian/news.gifBy . A sharp increase in the number of 18-year-olds from Peckham, Barking and Croydon going to university has helped London outpace the rest of the country in the proportion of young people entering higher education, a study reveals. According to the study published by the Higher Education Funding Council for England (Hefce), young people from London are 36% more likely to enter higher education now than they were in the late 1990s. That compares with a 26% increase for the rest of the country. More...

27 octobre 2013

Economics students aim to tear up free-market syllabus

 

 

http://static.guim.co.uk/static/c55907932af8ee96c21b7d89a9ebeedb4602fbbf/common/images/logos/the-guardian/news.gifBy Undergraduates at Manchester University propose overhaul of orthodox teachings to embrace alternative theories. Few mainstream economists predicted the global financial crash of 2008 and academics have been accused of acting as cheerleaders for the often labyrinthine financial models behind the crisis. Now a growing band of university students are plotting a quiet revolution against orthodox free-market teaching, arguing that alternative ways of thinking have been pushed to the margins. Economics undergraduates at the University of Manchester have formed the Post-Crash Economics Society, which they hope will be copied by universities across the country. More...

27 octobre 2013

Academics do not neglect teaching for research

 

http://static.guim.co.uk/static/c55907932af8ee96c21b7d89a9ebeedb4602fbbf/common/images/logos/the-guardian/news.gifIf Simon Jenkins' ill-informed diatribe against universities had been a student essay, I would have awarded it a clear fail (Universities should ditch the talk of investing in the future, 23 October). He claims that because of £9,000 fees, universities are "awash" with cash. No, the fees hike (which most academics thoroughly opposed) merely offset the 90% cut in teaching budgets imposed by the government. Many universities are still struggling financially. More...

27 octobre 2013

Reconnecting economics and real life

 

 

http://static.guim.co.uk/static/c55907932af8ee96c21b7d89a9ebeedb4602fbbf/common/images/logos/the-guardian/news.gifBravo Manchester University economics students for criticising "university courses for doing little to explain why economists failed to warn about the global financial crisis" (Economics students rebel at orthodox free-market syllabus, 25 October). However, there could be no explanation of why economists had failed to warn about the crisis, precisely because a significant number of high-profile non-neoclassical economists had warned about the crisis. More...

27 octobre 2013

The £54,000 degree: how well is AC Grayling's university doing?

 

 

http://static.guim.co.uk/static/c55907932af8ee96c21b7d89a9ebeedb4602fbbf/common/images/logos/the-guardian/news.gifBy Amelia Gentleman. It's a year since AC Grayling's New College of the Humanities opened for business, with its big-name lecturers and £18,000-a-year fees. Is it succeeding in its mission to be 'elite but not exclusive'?
At 9.30am promptly, AC Grayling begins a two-hour Introduction to Philosophy lecture for year one students in an airy conservatory at the back of his new private college. For anyone whose attention is straying, there are views on to a yard with plane trees, a white stucco mews house and the blackened brick of the smart Bloomsbury townhouse where the New College of the Humanities is based. None of the 19 students is gazing out of the window, however. They are focused on the lecture, which centres on René Descartes, but considers along the way the nature of knowledge and how we obtain it. More...

27 octobre 2013

Universities to get equity index

 

http://www.iol.co.za/polopoly_fs/iol-news5-1.989381!/image/464471284.png_gen/derivatives/absolute/464471284.pngAn equity index has been devised to measure transformation at universities in South Africa, researchers said on Wednesday.  “For the first time, a new and innovative quantitative measure of transformation has been devised to complement the many qualitative, descriptive measures,” the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) and the public universities transformation oversight committee (Putoc) said in a statement.  The results of a study on transformation at the country's universities would be presented to Parliament's university oversight committee on Wednesday. Research showed the pace of transformation in universities was “far from ideal”. More...

27 octobre 2013

UK universities have £5.2bn invested in the fossil fuel industry, report says

 

http://blueandgreentomorrow.com/wp-content/themes/blueandgreen-backup/images/logo/mini_monochrome.pngBy Ilaria Bertini. British universities have strong connections to the fossil fuels industry, with the equivalent of £2,083 invested for each UK student in the sector, according to a report by People & Planet. 
The study, produced by the student campaign network alongside oil and gas watchdog Platform and divestment group 350.org estimates that universities have £5.2 billion invested in oil and gas companies. It also reveals that senior executives from BP and Shell have received 20 awards and honorary degrees from British universities over the past decade. More...

27 octobre 2013

The older students who could save Taiwan's universities

 

http://static.bbci.co.uk/frameworks/barlesque/2.51.6/desktop/3.5/img/blq-blocks_grey_alpha.pngBy Cindy Sui. Every night after dinner, many of Taiwan's older people go out to nearby parks to chat with their neighbours, or stay home to watch TV and play with the grandchildren - but not 62-year-old Yu Chin-shan. He takes his briefcase full of books and notebooks, and goes to college. The semi-retired Mr Yu owns an IT services company and has been a boss for 20 years. But now he wants to fulfil a dream he couldn't afford when he was younger. More...

27 octobre 2013

Dirty Antebellum Secrets in Ivory Towers

 

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/misc/nytlogo152x23.gifBy Jennifer Schuessler. ‘Ebony and Ivy,’ About How Slavery Helped Universities Grow. When Craig Steven Wilder first began digging around in university archives in 2002 for material linking universities to slavery, he recalled recently, he was “a little bashful” about what he was looking for. More...

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