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08 November 2015 | Issue 389 | Register to receive our free e-newspaper by email each week | Advanced Search |
NEWSLETTER Cultural divide must end if Japan’s universities are to become ‘Super Global’![]() In Commentary, Jeremy Rappleye and Edward Vickers examine different scenarios regarding Japan’s ambitious Super Global Universities programme, and warn that continued segregation of international faculty and students will not lead to successful internationalisation. Nita Temmerman says that a major challenge for online learning in developing countries to address is that the learner and teacher are separated, as are the learners from each other, in societies that place high value on social contact. Ruwayshid Alruwaili says the surprising move to merge the ministries of higher education and education is feared to represent a policy drift in higher education in Saudi Arabia. And Nico Cloete discusses the flawed ideology of ‘free higher education’ in developing countries, with particular reference to the protest calls in South Africa. In our World Blog this week Rahul Choudaha says that the last thing any well-intentioned institution wants is to treat international students as ‘cash cows’ – they need rather to investigate and invest in international student success. In Features, Jan Petter Myklebust examines the strategies behind the entry of four Irish universities into the 50 top-performing universities’ list in the European Union’s Horizon 2020 programme this year. There are two Special Reports in this issue. The first focuses on the WISE Summit held in Qatar last week, from which Nic Mitchell writes about the value of private sector funding of higher education. The second covers the Eighth Annual International Conference of the South African Technology Network, from which Karen MacGregor reports on how to encourage entrepreneurship in higher education. Brendan O’Malley – Managing Editor
NEWS: Our correspondents worldwide report ![]() UNITED KINGDOM David JobbinsUK universities face their biggest shake-up in decades under plans for a further shift towards a market approach. This will include a new regime designed to reward good teaching, in which high performing universities will be allowed to increase their tuition fees by the rate of inflation. NIGERIA Tunde FatundeA sharp drop in oil revenue, combined with stringent new rules to prevent haemorrhaging of foreign currency reserves, has left thousands of Nigerian students studying abroad cut off from financial support, with the government agencies and parents unable to assist them. Students have sent distress calls to the Nigerian government for assistance. ZIMBABWE Kudzai MashiningaZimbabwe has come up with a law compelling the higher and tertiary education minister to ensure that at least half of ministerial appointees on all university councils are women, as required by the country’s Constitution. AUSTRALIA Brendan O'MalleyAustralia ranks “very, very poorly” on the commercialisation of research and must lift itself up through better collaboration between industry and universities, according to Senator Simon Birmingham, the minister for education and training, in a speech to the Australian Research Council. FINLAND Jan Petter Myklebust and Ian R DobsonMinister of Education and Culture Sanni Grahn-Laasonen and Minister of Foreign Trade and Development Lenita Toivakka last week presented a proposal to parliament for removing legal obstacles to the export of Finnish education products and expertise. DENMARK Jan Petter MyklebustThe near doubling of foreign nationals taking an academic degree in Denmark from 2008 to 2014 is a step forward, but the government should do more to ensure that foreign students stay on and work, according to Minister of Higher Education and Science Esben Lunde Larsen. GERMANY Michael GardnerGermany’s course guidance centres are increasingly seeing students turning up with their parents. The helicopter parent phenomenon could at least partly be because of greater numbers of under-age school-leavers enrolling at universities. MOROCCO Wagdy SawahelMoroccan academic Maati Monjib has suspended his three-week hunger strike after authorities ended a travel ban imposed on him. But he has been accused of destabilising state security and might face up to five years in prison. UNITED STATES Ellen Wexler, The Chronicle of Higher EducationIt was the kind of exit designed to make a statement. Last week all six editors and all 31 editorial board members resigned from Lingua, a prominent linguistics journal, after a disagreement with the journal’s publisher, Elsevier. The announcement re-energised concerns about the relationship between academics and for-profit companies, and the future of scholarly publishing. COMMENTARY ![]() JAPAN Jeremy Rappleye and Edward VickersWill Japan’s Super Global Universities programme succeed in internationalising Japanese higher education amid stiff competition or will continued segregation of international faculty and students continue to stand in the way of mutually beneficial internationalisation? GLOBAL Nita TemmermanSocial connection is an important part of online learning in developing countries and higher education needs to acknowledge this by finding ways to promote both remote learning and social contact. SAUDI ARABIA Ruwayshid AlruwailiMerging the higher education and education ministries has created concern that the drive towards a world-class system may be going off course. EUROPE John J JoughinThe University of East London is one of a number of universities in Europe offering scholarships to Syrian refugees and hopes some of the people it will help will one day build the Syria of the future. SOUTH AFRICA Nico Cloete‘Free Higher Education’ sounds revolutionary and is an appealing mobilising cry. But in a developing country it is financially impossible and morally wrong, as free higher education privileges the rich. The poster should read ‘Affordable higher education for all’ – with clear understanding that affordable means different costs for different groups in society. WORLD BLOG ![]() GLOBAL Rahul ChoudahaUniversities should not regard their international students as cash cows, but take a greater interest in new research that looks at what factors are necessary for them to succeed. FEATURES ![]() IRELAND Jan Petter MyklebustOne of the surprise success stories in the European Union’s Horizon 2020 programme this year was the entry of four Irish universities into the list of the 50 top-performing universities. But how did they do it? AFRICA Reuben KyamaThe MasterCard Foundation hosted its inaugural Young Africa Works Summit in Cape Town, South Africa, from 29-30 October 2015. The gathering focused on preparing young people for employment and entrepreneurship in agriculture. REUBEN KYAMA spoke with REETA ROY, president and CEO of the Toronto-based foundation, at the close of the summit. WISE 2015 ![]() The World Innovation Summit for Education, or WISE Summit, held in Doha, Qatar from 3 to 5 November under the theme “Investing for Impact: Quality education for sustainable and inclusive growth”, brought together public and private sector operators, policy-makers, governments, NGOs and foundations from over 100 countries. GLOBAL Nic MitchellPrivate sector funding of education is gradually winning over doubters about its social value as well as return on investment, say the authors of a new report from education management consultants, Parthenon-EY, presented at last week’s WISE Summit. GLOBAL Graeme AthertonIf higher education does not pro-actively tackle the world's most pressing educational problems, whether it is the need to keep pace with changing workplaces or forced displacement caused by conflict, issues of access and equity could become irrelevant. ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND HE ![]() The South African Technology Network, a grouping of universities of technology in South Africa and Namibia, held its Eighth Annual International Conference 2015 at Vaal University of Technology from 19-21 October. The theme was “Entrepreneurship Education for Economic Renewal”. This is the first of two special reports from the conference, which was attended by University World News. SOUTH AFRICA Karen MacGregorThe South African government used funding mechanisms to sharply increase the production of PhDs and research outputs in universities. Now clever ways need to be found to foster entrepreneurship and innovation in higher education, said Professor Ahmed Bawa, vice-chancellor of Durban University of Technology. NETHERLANDS Karen MacGregorAll universities in the Netherlands now offer entrepreneurship education and from next year it will be obligatory in vocational colleges, said senior researcher Dr Petra Gibcus. But content differs greatly between institutions and faculties – and it took far too long to integrate entrepreneurship education into the curriculum. GLOBAL Karen MacGregorThere are six key elements of an entrepreneurial university, according to Professor Deresh Ramjugernath, pro vice-chancellor of the University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa – good leadership and governance, capacity incentives, entrepreneurship in teaching and learning, a culture of entrepreneurship, stakeholder partnerships, and internationalisation. FACEBOOK ![]() University World News has a popular Facebook group. 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WORLD ROUND-UP ![]() TURKEY In what is seen by many as a severe blow to academic freedom, a newly drafted regulation suggested by Turkey's Higher Education Board will pave the way for the closure of private universities, writes Hasan Karali for Today’s Zaman. HONG KONG The vice-chancellor of the University of Hong Kong has distanced himself from a decision by the chairman of its governing council to seek a court order banning media revelations of its meetings, writes Stuart Lau for South China Morning Post. GLOBAL Getting to the top of a blue-chip company is still the prerogative of those who study at the world’s most elite universities, according to Heidrick & Struggles, the executive search company, writes Della Bradshaw for FT. UNITED KINGDOM Oxford University has been urged to review its decision to accept £75 million (US$114 million) from Len Blavatnik, Britain’s richest man, to build the Blavatnik school of government, writes Luke Harding for the Guardian. SOUTH AFRICA President Jacob Zuma is currently exploring the establishment of a formal commission of inquiry to look into transformation‚ free education and institutional autonomy at institutions of higher learning, as well as living conditions of students on campuses‚ reports RDM News Wire. MALAYSIA Fees for Malaysian students in public universities are amongst the lowest in the world, with the government subsidising at least MYR16,000 (US$3,722) per student for the duration of their studies, reports Bernama. GULF STATES Rectors of higher education in the Gulf Cooperation Council recently discussed the possibility of allowing GCC citizens to study at universities of member states with the terms of admission and privileges the same as their nationals, writes Abdul Hannan Tago for Arab News. FINLAND Education Minister Sanni Grahn-Laasonen has urged Finland’s universities to think seriously about which field of study they will specialise in by the year 2025. In an open letter urging universities to become the “best in the world” in a certain area, Grahn-Laasonen raps the learning institutions for their inefficient use of resources, asking for example why only 60% of university staff are employed in tuition or research, reports Yle. INDIA Governor Ram Naik has asked all universities in Uttar Pradesh to do away with Western attire at their convocations and opt for traditional ethnic wear, writes Ishita Mishra for TNN. AUSTRALIA Education Minister Simon Birmingham wants to make universities more accountable for how they spend their money after it was revealed billions of dollars a year are redirected from teaching to research, writes Matthew Knott for The Sydney Morning Herald. NORTH KOREA North Korea is making efforts to spur online education at its major universities in a bid to better instil the North's ideology into young people and nurture their expertise, reports Yonhap News Agency. ISRAEL Social Finance Israel and the Rothschild Caesarea Foundation recently announced the launch of a new social impact bond, the first of its kind in Israel in the field of higher education, which aims to reduce the drop-out rate and extend the studies of computer science students in Israel, writes Lidar Gravé-Lazi for the The Jerusalem Post. ZIMBABWE A senior University of Zimbabwe official has been suspended for allegedly providing President Robert Mugabe with a small cap of knowledge during the recent graduation ceremony, writes Valentine Maponga for NewsDay.
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