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22 November 2015 | Issue 391 | Register to receive our free e-newspaper by email each week | Advanced Search |
NEWSLETTER Research is playing a key role in efforts to better understand and fight ISIS![]() In Commentary Matthew Francis says academics have made tremendous advances in understanding why and how people join violent extremist groups like ISIS, and are sharing this research with intelligence agencies to inform the fight against terrorism. Jeremy Rappleye and Edward Vickers give pointers, from the perspective of foreign academics in Japan, as to how the country can produce the more globalised education system its policy-makers want. Eric Fredua-Kwarteng defends his concept of the developmental university in Africa, saying the developmental role of universities in helping solve Africa’s problems should start now. Draft education reforms in Vietnam have sparked controversial debate on the teaching of history in secondary schools and Ly Pham contends that reforms must start at university level, ensuring teachers are trained to build critical thinking skills. Alain Mayeur describes a new Internet portal for online learners and teachers in France, launched by the government as part of its digital strategy for education. In our World Blog, William Patrick Leonard suggests that mission statements may be the place to start a slimming down process in United States universities to better align expenses with likely income streams. In Features, Nicola Jenvey tells how higher education is the top cause that philanthropists donate towards, garnering 30% of total million-dollar global donations. And Wachira Kigotho says although Kenya is taking the university to the village, there are many compromises on quality that need to be addressed before other African countries think this is the answer to low access rates. Brendan O’Malley – Managing Editor
NEWS: Our correspondents worldwide report ![]() UNITED STATES Mary Beth MarkleinEnrolments of international students in United States colleges and universities climbed 10% last year to 974,936, the largest one-year rate of growth in 35 years, a report says. While China sent the largest number of students, the real story is about rising numbers of students coming from India. MYANMAR Sithu Aung MyintAung San Suu Kyi – whose National League for Democracy party won a resounding victory in this month’s democratic elections in Myanmar – is trying to intercede in a hunger strike by student leaders demanding that all jailed political prisoners be set free, amid fears that unrest over the hunger strike could disrupt the post-election transition to a new government. GERMANY Michael GardnerThe German government is to provide extra support for refugees seeking to study in the country. The new package of measures, which includes preparing students for study and supporting their integration in institutions, has been developed with the German Academic Exchange Service, DAAD. AFRICA-EUROPE Wagdy SawahelThe European Union and the African Union have adopted a plan to improve higher education cooperation, mobility and mutual recognition of qualifications in an effort to encourage legal migration free of the ‘suffering, abuse and exploitation’ experienced during the current sharp influx of refugees and migrants. SOUTH AFRICA Sharon DellIn a week of ongoing drama in South African higher education, a group of 226 academics from the University of Stellenbosch has backed a management proposal to adopt English as the primary language, with Afrikaans and isiXhosa as ‘additional’ languages. This followed demonstrations at Stellenbosch and violent protests at some other universities, with multiple arrests. SIERRA LEONE Francis KokutseAs life returns to normal in Sierra Leone following the World Health Organization’s decision to declare the country free of Ebola, it is emerging that one of its universities – which produces the bulk of the country’s health workers – has been badly hit by the loss of key staff. RUSSIA Eugene VorotnikovThe Russian government plans to create conditions for attracting foreign scientists to national universities, with the long-term aim of ensuring the share of foreign scientists among teaching staff of each leading Russian university should not be less than 10%. GLOBAL The BRICS countries – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – last Wednesday signed a far-reaching agreement on cooperation in education that includes joint research and more collaboration on postgraduate training and co-publishing. SWEDEN Jan Petter MyklebustThe number of fee-paying students from outside the European Union or European Economic Area at higher education institutions in Sweden rose by 30% in 2014-15 compared to the previous year, the first rise since tuition fees were introduced in 2011. NORWAY Jan Petter MyklebustA greater share of post-doctoral applicants who have not studied or worked abroad gain tenure than those who have been internationally mobile before and during their post-doctoral career, according to a new report. COMMENTARY ![]() UNITED KINGDOM Matthew FrancisUniversities are working with intelligence agencies to share their research on radicalisation and violent extremist groups, which is helping to inform the fight against ISIS. JAPAN Jeremy Rappleye and Edward VickersCan Japan be simultaneously more global and more nationalistic in its education policy? If it wants a greater voice internationally, it needs to present a more confident, outward-looking face on the global stage. AFRICA Eric Fredua-KwartengArguments against developmental universities range from the language of instruction and learning to the value placed on knowledge in Africa, but higher education institutions have a duty to embrace the communities they find themselves in and promote development. VIETNAM Ly PhamPlans to integrate history into a course on Citizenship and the Motherland ignore the basic issue of how we get students to believe that history matters. The reforms must start at university level, to ensure teachers are trained to build critical thinking skills. FRANCE Alain MayeurFrance’s Ministry of Education, Higher Education and Research has launched a new free Internet portal for everyone who wants to teach or learn about higher education online. FEATURES ![]() GLOBAL Nicola JenveyHigher education outstripped other causes as the recipient for multi-million-dollar donations globally in 2014, garnering US$7.58 billion in gifts or 30.9% of the US$24.5 billion global total, according to the Coutts Million Dollar Donors Report 2015. UNITED STATES Karin Fischer, The Chronicle of Higher EducationThe most recent study on foreign student trends was just released last week, showing robust growth, but the real question for American higher education is what the next report, one year from now, will show. There are already signs that the future outlook could be gloomy. AFRICA Wachira KigothoThe late Tanzanian president Julius Nyerere’s view of the university as a place where people’s minds are trained for independent thinking and problem solving at the highest level remained unchallenged for half a century in East Africa. But according to new studies, Kenya and Uganda are now shifting to the marketisation of higher education. WORLD BLOG ![]() UNITED STATES William Patrick LeonardMission statements need to be more focused to encourage higher education institutions to keep within budget. Mission creep with accompanying cost and debt burdens is often the product of open-ended mission statements. SCIENCE SCENE ![]() GLOBAL Geoff MaslenFires across the world are more prevalent on a Tuesday and less likely on a Sunday, according to a global study by researchers at the Australian universities of Melbourne and Monash. The findings highlight the dramatic effect that humans, religion and culture have on Earth’s climate. 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 ![]() INDIA The Kerala government is getting ready to set up a first-of-its-kind university in the country, exclusively for research-oriented studies related to gender, reports PTI. Many global agencies have already expressed interest to partner with it. UNITED KINGDOM Revelations that leading academics in the UK are earning more than £600,000 (US$916,000) while other staff have seen their pay cut, is evidence that the benefits awarded to vice-chancellors are “completely out of control”, according to a universities union, writes Richard Adams for the Guardian. AUSTRALIA Several universities are being threatened with tough penalties for allegedly providing data that would artificially boost their performance on prestigious research rankings used to allocate government funding, writes Matthew Knott for Sydney Morning Herald. VENEZUELA Normally buzzing with youthful high energy, Professor Blas Dorta's biology classroom at the Central University of Venezuela is eerily quiet. The university has been closed by administrators since September because of what they say is insufficient government funding. So are nine other Venezuelan public universities, leaving a total of 380,000 students in limbo, write Mery Mogollon and Chris Kraul for Los Angeles Times. JAPAN Researchers in Japan are one step closer to their goal of getting an artificial intelligence accepted by Tokyo University. The artificial intelligence, called Todai Robot Project, has passed the standardised Japanese universities entrance exam with higher than average marks, making it clever enough to get into most Japanese universities, writes Cara McGoogan for Wired. LITHUANIA A flawed higher education system has been an issue in Lithuania for many years, but the recent data and a growing discontent with inefficiencies in the higher education system among prominent education specialists, economists, students and the heads of the state, suggest it has reached a breaking point, reports Xinhua. CHINA Several universities in Taiwan and China signed an agreement last week with the aim of establishing a system to index Chinese-language academic journals, write Stanley Cheung and Kay Liu for CNA. UNITED KINGDOM All Scottish universities should consider accepting poorer pupils with significantly lower grades than middle class applicants to address a "fundamental unfairness" in the system, according to a new government-backed commission, writes Andrew Denholm for Herald Scotland. CHINA A Chinese professor who was dismissed from his management position after writing social media posts that “critique social issues” has claimed that an academic rival reported him to the authorities, it has been reported, in a case that is fuelling fears over intellectual control by the ruling Communist Party, writes David Matthews for Times Higher Education. UNITED STATES A professor who had his job offer rescinded over a series of tweets critical of Israel's 2014 bombardment of Gaza will receive US$600,000 plus legal costs under an agreement approved by University of Illinois trustees, report Al Jazeera and Associated Press. HONG KONG A university’s performance is judged by its overall success in achieving primary goals, such as teaching and research. On that score Hong Kong’s publicly funded universities fulfil their mission reasonably well, but they are let down in one area – turning research into commercial applications, writes Elaine Yau for South China Morning Post. UNITED ARAB EMIRATES All government and private universities and higher education institutions will include ‘innovation and business leadership’ as part of their curriculum starting from January 2016, reports Emirates 24/7. CANADA More Canadian institutions will face controversy over the influence of donors on programmes if they do not rethink their relationship with private funders, warn academics who have studied the relationship between donations and educational institutions, writes Simona Chiose for The Globe and Mail. UNITED STATES The student government at the University of Southern California has been left divided over a resolution which will request the institution to set aside spaces and scholarships for Syrian refugees, with one member describing it as having ‘poor timing’, writes Aftab Ali for the Independent.
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