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Archive for February, 2010

Bookmarks for February 25th

Posted by Eric on February 25th, 2010

My daily selection of the most interesting news on the internets:

  • Higher Education Budgets and the Global Recession: Tracking Varied National Responses and Their Consequences – In the midst of the global recession, how have national governments viewed the role of higher education in their evolving strategies for economic recovery? Demand for higher education generally goes up during economic downturns. Which nations have proactively protected funding for their universities and colleges to help maintain access, to help retrain workers, and to mitigate unemployment rates? And which nations have simply made large funding cuts for higher education in light of the severe downturn in tax revenues?
  • 21st Century Challenges: how global crises provide the opportunity to transform the world – The world now confronts crises unique in their global character. Distinguished LSE experts argue these crises provide an opportunity to transform the world and to build capacity for responding to extreme global challenges.
  • How will the next government maintain our leading edge? – Teaching and research in UK universities are among the best in the world. How will the next government maintain our leading edge? David Lammy MP, David Willetts MP and Stephen Williams MP in an open discussion in advance of the general election on the future of UK universities.

Bookmarks for February 23rd

Posted by Eric on February 23rd, 2010

My daily selection of the most interesting news on the internets:

  • ‘The Challenge of Bologna’ – The "Bologna Process," under which European nations have agreed on common higher education standards — with the goal of making degrees and students recognized and respected across borders — continues to attract increased attention in the United States. In his new book, Paul L. Gaston, Trustees Professor at Kent State University, considers the evolution of Europe's plans and their impact on American higher education. His book is The Challenge of Bologna: What United States Higher Education Has to Learn From Europe, and Why It Matters That We Learn It.
  • Rich students ‘should pay international-level fees to guarantee university place’ – Prof Ruth Farwell said by paying their way, wealthy students could help plug the multi-million pound funding gap in the higher education budget. There is no cap on the number of foreign students being admitted to British universities, but there are strict rules about the number of domestic and EU students allowed to take up places.
  • Sweden Will Start Charging Tuition to Foreign Students Next Year – The Swedish government announced on Friday that, beginning in the fall of 2011, foreign students from outside the European Union, the European Economic Area, and Switzerland will be charged tuition at Swedish universities.
  • Working with European academics – Google grew out of an academic experiment and we continue to value a strong dialogue with universities around the globe. While we do significant in-house research and engineering, we also maintain strong relations with leading academic institutions world-wide pursuing research in areas of common interest.

Bookmarks for February 12th

Posted by Eric on February 12th, 2010

My daily selection of the most interesting news on the internets:

  • Dutch higher education closes deal with Google – The Dutch organisation responsible for the IT infrastructure in education and for promoting the use of ICT in higher education, has closed a deal with Google to promote the use of Google apps. This will enable students to work ‘in the cloud’ on their existing university accounts.
  • Seoul National University’s new international campus to become education hub – “Establishment of the Siheung (City) international campus (of the university) will help my university grow into a globalized university,” said the president of Seoul National University in an interview. “The new campus has already drawn huge attention both at home and abroad particularly due to its geographical proximity to China, which is a huge education market.”
  • New issue of International Higher eduation focuses on branch campuses – Philip G. Altbach explains why branch campuses may be unsustainable; Rosa Becker identifies the new trends and directions in international branch campuses and Spencer Witte zooms in on the branch campus phenomenon in the Gulf states.

Bookmarks for February 11th

Posted by Eric on February 11th, 2010

My daily selection of the most interesting news on the internets:

  • Challenges in Overseas Student Recruitment – It may be mid-way through the current academic year for many universities across the globe, but in the boom-and-bust world of international student recruitment, everyday brings new and unpredictable challenges. For international student recruiters, the quest is to find a rich vein of students from across the world, which will not only enhance campus diversity but also bring in much-needed tuition revenue and also burnish a university's reputation abroad.
  • Science must be part of the solution – EU ministers, meeting at an informal council in the Spanish town of San Sebastián, this week unanimously approved the so-called Donostia Declaration, a document defining the role that European science has to play in economic recovery and stating that “science must be part of the solution.”
  • Good secondary-schooling key to ongoing educational, job success. – Canada’s top-performing high school students are 20 times more likely to access a university education than those at the bottom, and they are also more likely to choose pure science topics, according to a new OECD publication, Pathways to Success.

Bookmarks for February 10th

Posted by Eric on February 10th, 2010

My daily selection of the most interesting news on the internets:

  • Universities recruit students with inadequate English – A BBC investigation has found evidence that suggests some universities under financial pressure accept overseas students who lack adequate English.
  • We have failed the university challenge – It's a harsh but valuable lesson that a tertiary education, if it is to be worth anything, is a prize and a privilege that must be earned by those who apply for it. It is not a right, as so many applicants seem to think.
  • International Education Industry Is Broken – The Australian Government's changes to the skilled migration program will affect thousands of international students. For the industry, the greatest pain will be felt by private colleges. They have boomed because of the present policies and will decline. While universities may have overloaded on international students in programs such as masters of professional accounting, for example, they do not play in the cookery, hairdressing or mechanics space so will feel only a mild initial impact.
  • Foreign Ph.D. Recipients in Science Stay in U.S. at Near-Record Levels – Despite the alarms being raised about brain drain, the percentage of foreign students who receive doctorates in science and engineering in the United States and who choose to stay in the country after graduation has climbed in recent years, according to a study by the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education and the National Science Foundation. Using tax records, the study found 67 percent of foreign students who earned their Ph.D. in 2005 were still in the country in 2007. The rate had dipped for 2003 graduates, a pattern than the study's author attributes to a poor economy and security concerns following the September 11 terror attacks.

Bookmarks for February 9th

Posted by Eric on February 9th, 2010

My daily selection of the most interesting news on the internets:

  • Britain’s forgotten EU students – An increasingly large percentage of students in British universities are actually EU students. The latest figures from 2004 had 69,000, although anecdotally the last six years seem to have witnessed something of an explosion. Why is no one discussing the impact of EU students on university numbers?
  • Forecast shows jobs in Europe becoming more skills- and knowledge-intensive – A new forecast on the demand and supply of skills up to 2020 foresees a steady rise in knowledge- and skill-intensive occupations in Europe. The forecast was presented today by Cedefop, the EU's reference centre for vocational education and training, at the European Commission conference 'New Skills for New Jobs: Action Now'.
  • University president re-examines tenure – The leader of the country's largest university thinks it's time to re-examine how professors are awarded tenure, a type of job-for-life protection virtually unknown outside academia.

Bookmarks for February 5th

Posted by Eric on February 5th, 2010

My daily selection of the most interesting news on the internets:

  • Scientific breakthrough: Eating more makes you fat – Eating large food portions can significantly increase our weight even during short periods – researchers at the University of Ulster have discovered in the first ever study of its kind.
  • Obstacles to researchers’ mobility in the EU – Although the free mobility of researchers within the EU was one of the priorities of the European Research Area (ERA) at its creation in 2000, many obstacles to mobility remain. Some of them are ingrained in the lack of flexibility national systems show towards foreign workers. In Germany, Italy and Spain, what can only be described as opaque recruitment practices for senior positions are common.
  • Dutch wrong to ban Iranian nuclear students – The Netherlands is wrong to refuse Iranian students places on nuclear engineering masters programmes, a Hague court has ruled. The case was brought by a group of Iranian students who had been denied access to Dutch university courses and nuclear power plants.
  • Student protesters occupy Dutch universities – Students have occupied lecture halls and university buildings in Amsterdam, Nijmegen, Utrecht and Rotterdam. Dozens of students entered the buildings, blockaded the entrances and hung up banners. They are protesting against Education Minister Ronald Plasterk's plans for cutbacks in higher education. They are particularly opposed to the abolition of the basic grant and are demanding that the universities and their umbrella organisation the VSNU reject the cutbacks.

Bookmarks for February 2nd

Posted by Eric on February 2nd, 2010

My daily selection of the most interesting news on the internets: