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28 February 2016 | Issue 402 | Register to receive our free e-newspaper by email each week | Advanced Search |
NEWSLETTER Universities want a more British Europe – not a less European Britain![]() With the British people due to vote on 23 June on whether to stay in the European Union, David Jobbins reports that most university leaders in the UK have expressed unreserved support for the campaign for Britain to remain in the EU. Our Commentary section brings you two opposing views on Brexit: Anne Corbett confirms that the university sector has been pro-EU from the start and explains the reasons for this stance. Alan Sked, on the other hand, argues that Brexit is the obvious future for Britain and that vice-chancellors in the UK should stop panicking and lobbying the press to push their pro-European agenda when British researchers will still be able cooperate with the EU after Brexit. Also in Commentary, Manja Klemenčič says that students’ sense of belonging is key to student well-being and should be more carefully considered in institutional strategies. Adamu Ahmed describes some of the initiatives being undertaken by King Saud University to promote research excellence in Saudi Arabia. And Patrício Langa, Gerald Wangenge-Ouma, Jens Jungblut and Nico Cloete argue that South Africa should look to its northern neighbours in Africa to see that free higher education, which South African students are demanding, failed to universalise access to higher education in these countries. University World News is a media partner to the British Council’s Going Global 2016 conference, to be held in May in Africa for the first time. Karen MacGregor previews this big international higher education event in an interview with Jo Beall, director of education and society for the British Council, and looks at university rankings in discussion with Gerald Wangenge-Ouma, while Brendan O’Malley explores how universities can respond to the refugee crisis. In World Blog, Grace Karram Stephenson takes up the plight of the rising number of precarious, part-time instructors in academia, reporting that a recent conference in Canada highlighted the need for them to organise collectively. Brendan O’Malley – Managing Editor
NEWS: Our correspondents worldwide report ![]() EUROPE David JobbinsThe vast majority of university vice-chancellors have expressed unreserved support for the campaign for the United Kingdom to remain within the European Union following the announcement of a referendum to be held on 23 June. NIGERIA Tunde FatundeNigeria’s education minister has sacked the vice-chancellors and governing councils of 13 federal universities. In the same breath, he announced the university leaders’ successors. Strangely, no reason was given for the mass firing that has shocked the higher education community and the country. ZIMBABWE Kudzai MashiningoAn agreement has been signed that will see Zimbabwe sending nearly 20,000 graduates for employment in South Sudan. This is in line with an initiative by Zimbabwean authorities to export labour from a country that has Africa’s highest literacy rate and one of its highest jobless rates – estimated at over 80%. NEW ZEALAND John GerritsenNew Zealand's tertiary education system is facing a year-long investigation by a government agency charged with providing advice on productivity improvements to help institutions meet technological changes and international challenges. But there are fears it will pave the way for cost-cutting. MALAYSIA Yojana SharmaUniversities in Malaysia should stop using “broadly worded” laws to silence students and restrict debate on matters of public interest, according to Human Rights Watch. Laws that impose criminal penalties for peaceful expression – such as the Sedition Act, which is used to target critics – are of particular concern because of their chilling effect on free speech. ISRAEL Brendan O'MalleySix members of the Council for Higher Education resigned last Sunday in protest against the dismissal of its deputy chair, Professor Hagit Messer-Yaron, by Education Minister Naftali Bennett, and the appointment in her place of a senior lecturer, Dr Rivka Wadmany Shauman, a move that is strongly opposed by academics. SOUTH AFRICA Munyaradzi Makoni and Karen MacGregorViolent protests and racial clashes closed universities around South Africa last week. Vice-chancellors called for help in identifying perpetrators of campus violence, who showed “total disregard for the academic project, the rules of engagement and the laws and Constitution”. There have been arrests, injuries, burning of vehicles and destruction of buildings. HONG KONG Yojana SharmaHong Kong’s last British governor Chris Patten has raised hackles in Hong Kong by claiming the autonomy of local universities is being reined in because of students’ involvement in the pro-democracy Umbrella Movement. UNITED KINGDOM Brendan O'MalleyThere are no off-the-shelf solutions from other countries for the government to copy in its plans for a framework to rate and reward teaching excellence. But there are lessons to heed from rating systems in other education and care markets, according to a paper from the Higher Education Policy Institute. UNITED STATES Courtney Kueppers, The Chronicle of Higher EducationThe Fulbright programme, run by the US Department of State, is widely seen as a prime opportunity to add international experience to one’s résumé. The programme seeks to send the message that they are committed to promoting diversity in the scholar and student programmes for the long term. COMMENTARY ![]() EUROPE Anne CorbettOn 23 June British people will vote on whether to stay in the European Union. University groups have been quick to respond and they are being joined by the European students’ union. EUROPE Alan SkedUniversities are acting as vested interest groups, lobbying the press to push their pro-European Union agenda, but changes to the regulations show that British researchers can still cooperate with the EU after Brexit. GLOBAL Manja KlemenčičA sense of belonging is key to student well-being, but what can universities do to help create this, particularly for groups such as international students who may face more barriers than others to feel part of an academic community? SAUDI ARABIA Adamu AhmedKing Saud University has instituted a series of research support programmes to promote the production of excellent research so that Saudi Arabia can compete with the world’s best universities. AFRICA Patrício Langa, Gerald Wangenge-Ouma, Jens Jungblut and Nico CloeteIn South Africa, where students are demanding free higher education, the norm is to draw lessons from the global North. But if the country looks to Africa it will find that free higher education failed to solve the challenges of universalising access or achieving social inclusion. GOING GLOBAL 2016 ![]() On 3-5 May education world leaders will descend on Cape Town, South Africa, for Going Global 2016, an open forum to debate international higher and further education issues and challenges, and to discuss collaborative solutions, for which University World News is a media partner. The focus will be on 'Building nations and connecting cultures: education policy, economic development and engagement'. This week and next, our reporters preview some of the key topics that will be discussed. GLOBAL Karen MacGregorGoing Global 2016 really began with a “constructive but feisty” steering meeting in Cape Town about what the focus could be – and why the British Council was even leading such a global higher education debate. The theme of “Building Nations and Connecting Cultures” came out of a rich discussion on local versus international priorities and how they mesh or don’t, said Jo Beall, director of education and society for the British Council. GLOBAL Karen MacGregor“There can never be a single, reliable, overarching ranking system that is acceptable to all universities and interested parties, because universities mean different things to different people,” says Gerald Wangenge-Ouma, director of institutional planning at the University of Pretoria in South Africa. But universities should use ranking as a means to improve, while ranking systems should support stability and recognise multiple expressions of excellence. GLOBAL Brendan O'MalleyRefugees spend on average 17 years in exile, often stuck in a state of limbo where they cannot work outside their camp, and fewer than 1% gain access to higher education. Providing scholarships or collaborating to offer connected learning in the camps are two key ways that universities can address this social injustice. WORLD BLOG ![]() CANADA Grace Karram StephensonA recent conference in Canada has addressed ways of improving conditions for the rising number of precarious employees working in academia and highlights the need for them to organise collectively. ACADEMIC FREEDOM ![]() THAILAND Pavin ChachavalpongpunExiled academics are being threatened and harassed for criticising the Thai regime. The pressure is being applied not just directly but also by intimidation of their families in Thailand. Yet Western countries which regularly posture about democracy and human rights, particularly the United States, have been reluctant to punish the junta. MIDDLE EAST Laurie A BrandThis year has seen an unprecedented level of protests from the Middle East Studies Association on academic freedom in the Middle East, with attacks in Turkey representing the broadest targeted assault against academics the association has seen. Campaigners have been aided by an explosion in information about violations on digital platforms. 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 ![]() UNITED STATES Frustrated by soaring tuition costs, crushing student loan debt and a lack of skilled workers, particularly in science and technology, more and more states have adopted the idea of rewarding public colleges and universities for churning out students educated in fields seen as important to the economy, writes Patricia Cohen for The New York Times. INDIA Communist Party of India (Marxist) leader Sitaram Yechury last week castigated the Bharatiya Janata Party for trying to suppress dissent and impose their idea of a “theocratic, fascistic Hindu Rashtra” on the country, and asked the government to "stop interfering" in universities which have been set up under central laws, reports Press Trust of India. UNITED KINGDOM A new report on the gender gap in Scottish universities has suggested that by 2030 no individual course will be permitted to have more than 75% male or female students, writes Andrew Wade for The Engineer. GERMANY Tuition fees at US universities have risen five-fold since 1985 and continue to rise. But German universities offer free education to everyone – including Americans, writes Rick Noack for The Washington Post. AUSTRALIA Australian universities are making a global push into free online education with nearly 50 courses either scheduled or under way with the major international massive open online course providers, writes Tim Dodd for the Australian Financial Review. MALAYSIA Higher Education Minister Datuk Seri Idris Jusoh says any decision on professors’ contract renewals will be decided by the public universities themselves, writes Hashini Kavishtri Kannan for New Straits Times. ZAMBIA The Young African Leaders Initiative says the continued closure of the University of Zambia and the Copperbelt University is a cost to the country and parents, reports Lusaka Times. MALAYSIA A few universities from Britain are keen to set up local campuses in Malaysia following their interest in the potential of higher education, reports Bernama. UNITED KINGDOM-NIGERIA Students have called for a bronze statue adorning a Cambridge college to be returned to Nigeria. It was taken from the country in the 19th century, writes Corey Charlton for MailOnline. SOUTH AFRICA Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan did not say much about the funding of universities in his Budget speech, except that extra support amounting to R16 billion will go to the higher education system over the medium term (three years), writes Jaco Leuvennink for Times Live. CHINA Chinese universities will re-introduce paediatrics as an undergraduate major this year for the first time in 17 years. The move is to ease the severe shortage of paediatricians in the country to prepare for possible baby booms brought by the end of the one-child policy, writes Wu Guoxiu for CCTV.com. UNITED KINGDOM A bombshell funding deal has left north and north-east universities bearing the brunt of sweeping cuts to higher education. Last week opposition politicians lashed out at the Scottish National Party over the cuts, saying they would leave Scottish education in the “Dark Ages”, writes Andrew Liddle for The Press and Journal. UNITED STATES The University of Oklahoma has agreed to return a painting that the Nazis stole from a French family during World War II, a lawyer and university officials said last week in announcing a settlement of a drawn-out dispute over the artwork's ownership, writes Daniel C Houston for Associated Press.
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