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17 March 2013 | Issue 0263 | Register to receive our free e-newspaper by email each week | Advanced Search |
NEWSLETTER Venezuela after Chávez – A chance for universities and state to mend divides?![]() This week in World Blog, Elliot Storm and Grace Karram probe whether Hugo Chávez's death will bring universities and the Venezuelan government closer together. In Commentary, Ronald Barnett argues that there is a need for more imaginative ideas on the university and suggests that one ‘feasible utopia’ could be the idea of the ‘ecological university’. Allan E Goodman describes a trip to Myanmar by the largest-ever US delegation of universities, aimed at helping the country’s transition and development. Vincenzo Raimo points out that international student recruitment agents get a lot of bad press – but if agents act unethically, whose fault is it really? In the second part of a Special Report on the Going Global 2013 conference held in Dubai this month, Katherine Forestier looks at what is required to tackle the disconnect between the skills of graduates and those demanded by economies in Asia, and an action plan to tackle the under-representation of women in the upper echelons of higher education. In Features, Wagdy Sawahel outlines discussions on the role of higher education following the Arab Spring in North Africa, and how to protect academic freedom and autonomy. Jonathan Dyson charts the growing number of international universities setting up in Malaysia’s new trading zone and ‘education hub’. Gilbert Nganga reports on a 30% funding boost for higher education in Kenya that will bankroll 15 new public universities, and John Grobler finds that draconian new regulations for research in Namibia are threatening to strangle science. Karen MacGregor – Global Editor
NEWS: Our correspondents worldwide report ![]() GLOBAL Karen MacGregorHigher education requires “deep, radical and urgent transformation”, says a just-published report from the UK’s Institute for Public Policy Research. A new phase of competitive intensity is emerging, technology is changing and the traditional university is under pressure from, among others, private providers and MOOCs. UNITED KINGDOM David JobbinsThe 2012 reforms of higher education in England – the switch to higher tuition fees and lower direct state funding – pose no immediate risk to the overall financial health of the country’s universities, says an official report published last week. VENEZUELA Andrew RosatiAs Nicólas Maduro takes the reins as Venezuelan interim president following the death of his strongman predecessor Hugo Chávez, educators and university administrators are hoping for a chance to repair tattered relations with their government. EUROPE Jan Petter MyklebustAround 1,000 participants from more than 100 countries participated in a five-day conference launching Horizon 2020 in Brussels this month. Its aim was to encourage worldwide collaboration in science and explore how Horizon 2020 could “enable an effective scientific response to global challenges”. SOUTH AFRICA Nicola JenveyAcademics from the BRICS countries – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – last week established a policy think-tank ahead of the fifth BRICS summit, to be held in Durban. South Africa called for strengthening research collaboration and academic exchange in the global South, and placing knowledge production at the heart of the emerging-country bloc. EUROPE Carmen PaunUniversities should be more transparent about what they offer through PhD programmes, to better allow students to compare doctoral studies across Europe, says Thomas Jørgensen, author of the recently concluded Accountable Research Environments for Doctoral Education project. NIGERIA Tunde FatundeFor the first time in decades, Nigeria’s National Universities Commission set up a committee to visit all federal and state universities and undertake a forensic audit. It found widespread problems including poor staffing, underfunding and weak infrastructure. EGYPT Ashraf KhaledA stunning defeat recently suffered by students from Egypt's ruling Muslim Brotherhood at most state-run universities foreshadows the country’s forthcoming parliamentary elections, according to observers. BANGLADESH Daniel NelsonThe world of higher education is beginning to recognise adaptation to climate change as a major research topic and an academic discipline, according to one of the world’s leading adaptation spec ialists, Saleemul Huq. LUXEMBOURG Jan Petter MyklebustSix applicants for student loans and grants have taken Luxembourg to the European Court of Justice after being turned down by the country’s student loan scheme, CEDIES, on the grounds that they are children of frontier workers. CEDIES claimed that eligibility requires residence in Luxembourg. A court ruling is expected later this year. GOING GLOBAL 2013 ![]() The British Council’s Going Global 2013 conference on “Internationalising Higher Education” was held in the Dubai World Trade Centre from 4-6 March and attended by 1,300 higher education policy-makers and practitioners from around the world. This is the second set of articles on the event to be published by University World News – click here for the full coverage. ASIA Katherine Forestier Countries of the Association of South East Asian Nations and China face serious disconnects between the knowledge and skills that their higher education systems provide graduates, and the skills needed for the countries’ future development. GLOBAL Katherine ForestierHong Kong: zero. Japan: 2.3. India: three. Kuwait: three. Turkey: seven. UK: 14. Australia: 17. The numbers tell a story. They are the percentages of universities that have women as leaders in a range of jurisdictions around the world. FEATURES ![]() NORTH AFRICA Wagdy SawahelHigher education experts from around the world have proposed strategies to protect and promote academic freedom and institutional autonomy amid the waves of socio-political transformation that have followed Arab Spring revolutions in Egypt, Libya and Tunisia. MALAYSIA Jonathan DysonA growing number of international universities are setting up operations on the 243 hectare site that will be part of Iskandar Malaysia, a new eco-city and trading zone with districts for tourism, health care and education, designed to help regenerate Johor state. KENYA Gilbert NgangaKenya has increased funding for higher education by 30% for the financial year beginning in July, as it seeks to bankroll 15 new public universities. But institutions say even this boost is way below financial needs – and election promises made by Kenya’s new president could disrupt the sector’s plans. NAMIBIA John GroblerDraconian new regulations for all academic research in Namibia represent a first-class invitation to several possible constitutional lawsuits. WORLD BLOG ![]() VENEZUELA Elliot Storm and Grace KarramUnder Hugo Chávez, a gap opened up between Venezuela’s government and universities, which feared an attack on their autonomy. Will his death bring the two sides closer together? Will both be able to give a little ground – universities doing more to widen participation and the government allowing them more independence? COMMENTARY ![]() GLOBAL Ronald BarnettThere is a lack of ideas of the university that are critical in tone, positive in spirit, and with an awareness of the deep and global structures that underpin institutions. What are needed are not merely utopias of the university, but feasible utopias – and one contender could be the idea of the ‘ecological university’. MYANMAR Allan E GoodmanThe largest-ever delegation of American universities to Myanmar has just returned and has identified a range of areas where international partnerships can help the country to develop and reform. Myanmar is at a critical juncture and higher education has a vital role to play. UNITED KINGDOM Vincenzo RaimoUniversities need to be more transparent about their use of student recruitment agents. A radical reform of the current system, which would open it to much greater scrutiny, would make not only ethical but also long-term business sense. SCIENCE SCENE ![]() GLOBAL Geoff MaslenAn international team of researchers has issued a stark warning about the perils the world faces in the near future because of mounting evidence confirming the carbon dioxide effects of a 5º C increase in the temperature of the Arctic Ocean. GLOBAL Some people do not learn from their mistakes because of the way their brain works, according to research by an international team of psychologists who examined what it is about the brain that makes someone a 'good learner'. AUSTRALIA Eating greens may be even more important than previously thought, with the discovery that an immune cell population essential for intestinal health could be controlled by leafy greens in the human diet. GLOBAL An international study has resulted in the strongest evidence yet that fluoride in drinking water provides dental health benefits for adults. In the first population-level study of its kind, researchers found that fluoridated drinking water prevents tooth decay for all adults regardless of age – and significantly so for people exposed to fluoride for most of their lives. FACEBOOK ![]() University World News has a popular Facebook group. If you are not a member, do consider joining to see our regular updates, post on our wall and communicate with us and other University World News fans. You can also follow University World News on Twitter @uniworldnews
WORLD ROUND-UP ![]() TUNISIA Several high-profile violent incidents at Tunisian universities have highlighted concerns about security in higher education institutions, writes Roua Khlifi for Tunisialive. NEW ZEALAND All eight of New Zealand's universities are being taken to the New Zealand Copyright Tribunal for refusing to agree to an increased annual licence fee that allows lecturers to copy authors' work for students, writes John Lewis for The New Zealand Herald. SPAIN Students at public universities in Spain have held a day of strikes and demonstrations to protest against cuts made to education by the conservative government of Mariano Rajoy, reports Prensa Latina. EGYPT Egypt’s Supreme Council of Universities announced last Sunday that it had decided to ban partisan activities on campuses, writes Fady Salah for Daily News. UNITED STATES California lawmakers detailed a plan last Wednesday to require the state’s 145 public colleges and universities to grant credit for low-cost online courses offered by outside groups, including classes offered by for-profit companies, writes Ry Rivard for Inside Higher Ed. UNITED STATES EdX has made publicly available source code that it built specifically to support online interactive learning, writes Sharleen Nelson for Campus Technology. The non-profit online learning platform founded by Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has released XBlock SDK, the underlying architecture supporting EdX course content. JAMAICA A new high-capacity fibre optics research and education network will connect colleges and universities in 21 countries in the Caribbean, writes Avia Collinder for The Gleaner. MIDDLE EAST Israeli Arabs have lagged behind the Jewish majority economically and have accused the government and Jewish employers of discrimination. The state has pledged to narrow the gap and sees promoting higher education among Arabs as key, write Alisa Odenheimer and Gwen Ackerman for Bloomberg. GERMANY Struggling with tightening purse strings and shrinking research budgets, Germany's universities are fighting back with funding from big business. A new online portal aims to publicise any dubious sponsorship deals, writes Richard Fuchs for Deutsche Welle. UNITED KINGDOM Students choosing a university can now look up how many hours of teaching they can expect, their likelihood of getting a job and what other students thought of their course. But this year, one crucial piece of information is missing. If your chosen institution is in trouble, with plummeting applications for the second year in a row, you may well be in the dark about it, writes Anna Fazackerley for the Guardian. UNITED STATES A cheating scandal at Harvard College just got bigger, and this time the focus is flipped: administrators, not students, are under fire, reports Dana Ford for CNN. The university has apologised for the way it handled a secret search of the email accounts of resident deans. UNITED STATES University of Utah trustees signed off on a plan last week to open the institution’s first international branch campus, in a project subsidised by the South Korean government, writes Lindsay Whitehurst for The Salt Lake Tribune. BRAZIL There aren’t many similarities between Scotland’s capital and Brazil’s largest city. But Edinburgh University is adding to its “longstanding links” with Latin America by opening a liaison office in São Paulo, reports Edinburgh Evening News. AUSTRALIA New South Wales Education Minister Adrian Piccoli has refused to back off on plans to set benchmarks for new teachers based on higher school certificate results, despite universities saying they may not implement the plan, write Josephine Tovey and Amy McNeilage for the Sydney Morning Herald. UNITED STATES The real reason why US college students are so tired is because they put work before just about everything, including their studies, writes Richard Morris for the Guardian. They take 15 or 18 credit hours per week and hold a campus job and maybe an internship on top of that.
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