Canalblog Tous les blogs Top blogs Emploi, Enseignement & Etudes Tous les blogs Emploi, Enseignement & Etudes
Suivre ce blog Administration + Créer mon blog
MENU

Formation Continue du Supérieur

19 août 2013

Duncan pledges more help for parents seeking federal college loans

http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRhwpavMl1CkAKTn2PPT2ufFmbq6MXoP8a9IKbVyxKLZ7OUZgOSgwG63nwBy . The Education Department is taking new steps to help parents obtain federal college loans if their applications are rejected because of minor problems in their credit history — an effort to address complaints about tighter lending standards that has hurt enrollment at historically black colleges and universities.
Education Secretary Arne Duncan disclosed the action in a letter Tuesday to Rep. Marcia L. Fudge (D-Ohio), chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus. For months, advocates of historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) have pressed Duncan for help because a sharp reduction in lending to parents has had a significant impact on HBCUs, including Howard University in the District, Morgan State University in Maryland and Hampton University in Virginia. More...

19 août 2013

How students are being set up to fail

http://img.washingtonpost.com/rf/image_145x100/WashingtonPost/Content/Blogs/Images/201308/report1.jpegBy Jeff Bryant. I have this recurring nightmare – one that, I fear, is about to become reality for most of America’s school children. In my dream, I’m back in elementary school. It’s testing day and I’m struggling to remember my locker combination and get to class on time. My backpack implausibly opens and spills its contents into the hallway. Indifferent schoolmates rush by.
Finally I’m seated in class. The other students are already busily filling out their tests. An unfriendly proctor passes out the exam, and as I scan down the page, my stomach seizes into knots. I can’t answer a single question. The math problems are a confusion of numbers and symbols. The readings are worded with vocabulary totally foreign to me.
Oh, and did I mention I’m not wearing any pants?
Why do I fear my recurring nightmare – except the part about not wearing any pants – is becoming a reality for more of America’s school children? And why should anyone professing to care about the welfare of the nation’s school children care about this? More...

19 août 2013

HBCUs seek Obama’s help on parent loans

http://img.washingtonpost.com/rf/image_145x100/2010-2019/WashingtonPost/2013/05/11/Local/Images/howardgrad91368299957.jpgBy . The leaders of Morgan State, Bowie State, Howard and eight other historically black universities warned President Obama last month that new limits on federal lending to parents would produce a “devastating impact on student enrollment” in the coming school year.
The university leaders asked the president, in a letter dated July 30, to reverse a step the administration took in October 2011 to tighten underwriting standards for parent loans. Low-income parents shut out from federal financing, they said, would be unable to pay college bills, forcing many students to withdraw from school. More...

19 août 2013

Controversy over compulsory Islamic studies on foreign campuses

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Yojana Sharma and Emilia Tan. An Islamic studies and Asian civilisation course, compulsory for students in Malaysia’s public universities, will also be mandatory for all private university students – including those at foreign branch campuses – from 1 September. Amid controversy over the course content, Muhyiddin Yassin, Malaysia’s deputy prime minister and education minister, said the move was intended to “streamline the requirements” of private and public universities. Vincenzo Raimo, director of the international office at the University of Nottingham in the UK, which has a branch campus in Malaysia, said the subject was being made compulsory across the board, including at foreign branch campuses. TITAS, as the religion and civilisation course is known by its Malaysian acronym, has sparked considerable debate within the country, particularly among non-Malay communities. Critics have called on the government to make the subject non-compulsory for non-Muslims; Malaysia has significant Hindu, Chinese Buddhist and Christian minorities, many of them attending private universities because of restricted places at public institutions. Just over 60% of Malaysians consider themselves to be Muslim, according to official census figures. More...
19 août 2013

Making the most of immigrant skills in Europe

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Peta Lee. Modifications to existing systems in Europe are vital to removing barriers and improving the recognition of immigrants’ foreign qualifications, according to a European Union-funded report titled Tackling Brain Waste. The document, compiled by Madeleine Sumption for the Migration Policy Institute’s project Immigration, Skills, and Mobility in the Transatlantic Labor Market, concluded that more detailed evidence on the costs and benefits of possible interventions was needed if policy decisions were to be directed more effectively. The report pointed out, for example, that little was known about how employers valued formal assessments of qualifications equivalence (or if they were even aware of the various types of policy designed to facilitate recognition internationally), and many of the programmes to support retraining had never been evaluated. More...
19 août 2013

University rankings – The Nigerian experience

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Wachira Kigotho. The absence of nearly all African universities from global ranking systems has been of major concern to potential students, parents, employers and other stakeholders, who feel locked out of making informed choices on the quality of universities in Africa. But Nigeria – which has one of the largest higher education systems on the continent, comprising 128 universities – has established a national ranking system, the first of its kind in Africa. In 2001 Nigeria’s National Universities Commission, or NUC, developed a set of indicators of verifiable data that could help prospective students to make career choices.
“There was also the desire by the government to have a transparent and objective mechanism for identifying centres for excellence that could benefit from preferential funding,” said Professor Peter Okebukola, a former executive secretary of the NUC, in a study on Nigeria’s experience of ranking published in UNESCO’s recent report on Rankings and Accountability in Higher Education: Uses and misusesMore...
19 août 2013

Countries watch EU court rulings against student discrimination

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Jan Petter Myklebust. The European Court of Justice, or ECJ, of the European Union has been ruling against discriminatory practices regarding student financial aid for the children of migrant workers, and regarding discounted public transport fares. But the European Students’ Union has warned that the grant system in several states might be at risk.
In the case of Elodie Giersch and others v Luxembourg, on 20 June the court ruled that three European Union (EU) citizens were entitled to support because their parents worked in Luxembourg. The students could not be discriminated against on the basis of nationality.
“While stating that Luxembourg legislation which excludes the children of frontier workers for entitlement to financial aid for higher education studies pursues a legitimate objective, the court holds that the current system goes beyond what is necessary to attain that objective.”
The court explicitly said that the objective of increasing the number of Luxembourg citizens with a higher education degree could be “attained using less restrictive measures”. Read...
19 août 2013

Spain dominates Erasmus student exchange flows

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Jan Petter Myklebust. Of the 252,827 students exchanged under the Erasmus programme during 2011-12, around 75,000 – 30% – moved between 100 sending or receiving universities. Spain dominated the list, with 31 institutions in the top 100 for both sending and receiving students. The University of Granada was the top sending and top receiving university, sending 2,101 of its students abroad under Erasmus and receiving 2,052 Erasmus students. Among the top 100 receiving institutions, only four were in the United Kingdom and only one – the University of Nottingham – was in the top 100 for sending universities. More...
19 août 2013

Go-ahead for East Africa’s second Islamic university

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Maina Waruru. East Africa has a second Islamic university, after Kenya’s Commission for University Education, or CUE, granted a letter of interim authority to Umma University to offer various degree and diploma courses. On 23 July the university transformed from being Thika College for Sharia and Islamic Studies to a full university owned and managed by Islamic institutions in Kenya led by the Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims. Umma University, which says its vision is to be a “centre of excellence and a seat of knowledge” in East Africa, is busy setting up a new main campus in Kajiado county, some 70 kilometres south of Nairobi. More...
19 août 2013

Mugabe promises to improve university access, quality

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Kudzai Mashininga. Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has promised to improve higher education quality and access, following his re-election in a disputed poll on 31 July that handed him what is believed to be his last term in office. Mugabe (89), who presides over a country with the highest literacy rate in Africa, made the pledge at his last rally before voting day. The president said that when he took over the reins in 1980, at independence from Britain and white minority rule, only one person in the previous administration’s public service had a degree: George Smith, who he was later appointed a high court judge, now retired. Today, Mugabe claimed, Zimbabwe has the most degreed state employees in Africa. More...
Newsletter
53 abonnés
Visiteurs
Depuis la création 2 803 144
Formation Continue du Supérieur
Archives