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14 August 2016 | Issue 423 | Register to receive our free e-newspaper by email each week | Advanced Search |
NEWSLETTER Universities and employers should collaborate on alternative credentials![]() In Commentary, Sean Gallagher says alternative credentialing experiments are increasingly blurring the boundaries between professional development, occupational credentialing and formal higher education and suggests higher education institutions and employers work together to more intentionally shape the development of the credentials market. Yossef Ben-Meir, Mouhssine Tadlaoui-Cherki and Kati Roumani say that a non-profit organisation in Morocco is demonstrating how providing young people with training that will help bring social justice to communities through grassroots development can play a role in preventing them from being recruited by terror organisations like ISIS. Bernhard Streitwieser and Simon Morris-Lange encourage Germany’s policy-makers and universities to lead the way in integrating young refugees and encouraging tolerance despite recent terror attacks which threaten to turn public opinion against migrants. In World Blog, Nita Temmerman provides eight pointers which make for an effective academic board, which is fundamental to good academic governance. In Features, Jan Petter Myklebust reports on a declaration by top early-stage researchers presented to European Union ministers calling for better conditions to attract young researchers. The Association of Commonwealth Universities leaders’ conference 2016 was held in Ghana last month. In a Special Report Brennan Weiss outlines a call by former United Nations secretary-general Kofi Annan for universities to promote democracy, as growing inequality and intolerance threaten higher education globally. Tunde Fatunde reports on a ministerial panel that called for higher education to empower both women and men, and Brennan Weiss examines the introduction of venture creation programmes in higher education and the role of the entrepreneurial university. Brendan O’Malley – Managing Editor
NEWS: Our correspondents worldwide report ![]() INDIA Ranjit DevrajInternationalising higher education curricula is high on the agenda for India’s new Minister for Human Resource Development, Prakash Javadekar, along with the establishment of foreign universities in the country and collaboration between Indian universities and the world’s best. GLOBAL Mary Beth MarkleinAlarmed by the growing frequency of news reports about academic corruption, an international panel of experts is calling for "action on a broad front" to combat the problem, arguing that dishonest practices are "undermining the quality and credibility of higher education around the world". BANGLADESH Mushfique WadudBangladesh’s higher education regulatory body, the University Grants Commission, has ordered all private universities in the country to form a ‘monitoring cell’ to create awareness among students “against terrorism, extremism and militancy”. The new units will have to send monthly monitoring reports to the education ministry and the University Grants Commission. EUROPE Yojana SharmaA survey of academics in the United Kingdom has found that some world-class scientists have already turned down posts at universities in the UK since the referendum in June that voted in favour of Britain leaving the European Union and one in five were planning to leave UK research posts, citing Brexit as the reason. ZIMBABWE Kudzai MashiningaUnemployed graduates in Zimbabwe have held protests while wearing graduation gowns, calling on President Robert Mugabe to create the jobs he promised in his election manifesto, as a wave of demonstrations rocked the country. TURKEY Brendan O'MalleyPresident Recep Tayyip Erdogan signed a decree enabling the closure of 15 universities and the Council of Higher Education ordered a crackdown on academics in the wake of the failed attempted military coup. GERMANY-TURKEY Michael GardnerWorld University Service Germany fears that Turkey’s academics are being “systematically persecuted” and has made an urgent appeal to German universities to accommodate Turkish scholars and students under pressure from the government. KENYA Gilbert NgangaKenya’s university students are facing a defining moment following a stand-off between the government and university administrators over a plan to raise tuition fees from next year. NEW ZEALAND John GerritsenNew Zealand’s government has launched a NZ$70 million (US$49 million) plan aimed at attracting world-leading researchers and their teams – particularly people with an established record in innovation and entrepreneurship in the top ‘maker’ disciplines – to the nation’s universities over the next four years. SOUTH AFRICA Munyaradzi MakoniSouth African students, universities and colleges as well as banks and investors have been urged to assist in the search for “smarter solutions” to an ongoing, chronic shortage of student accommodation. COMMENTARY ![]() MOROCCO Yossef Ben-Meir, Mouhssine Tadlaoui-Cherki and Kati RoumaniA non-profit organisation is working with young people in Morocco through a range of training and capacity-building programmes that aim both to give them practical skills and improve the lives of their communities. GERMANY Bernhard Streitwieser and Simon Morris-LangeGermany has been shocked by a series of terrorist attacks, but this should galvanise the country’s universities and policy-makers to address the barriers to the successful integration of many thousands of young refugees. UNITED STATES Sean GallagherUniversities need to collaborate with employers who are the early adopters and opinion leaders in the world of new alternative credentials. VENEZUELA Claudio BifanoThe underfunding of science, very low wages for teachers and brain drain are a result of years of politicisation of higher education, under which peer review for financing research projects became no longer important and the award of scholarships and the equipping of research laboratories were subject to politics. WORLD BLOG ![]() GLOBAL Nita TemmermanThe academic board is at the core of academic governance and if it is not effective it calls into question the whole academic framework for verifying quality and integrity in teaching, learning and scholarship. So what makes for an effective one? FEATURES ![]() EUROPE Jan Petter MyklebustWould any of our current systems have funded a young Albert Einstein or a Marie Sklodowska-Curie? The question was posed to the informal meeting of the Council of Ministers responsible for Competitiveness (Research) under the incoming Slovak Presidency of the Council of the European Union, last month by excellent young researchers calling for more diverse recruitment and freedom from stifling red tape. ACU LEADERS’ CONFERENCE ![]() The Association of Commonwealth Universities held its Conference of University Leaders 2016 in Ghana’s capital Accra from 27-29 July, under the theme “Defining the responsible university: Society, impact and growth". University World News was there, along with 250 university leaders, academics, officials and students from across the world. GLOBAL Brennan WeissFormer United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan called on universities around the world to promote democracy as growing inequality and intolerance threaten higher education globally, at this year’s Association of Commonwealth Universities leaders’ conference held in Ghana. GLOBAL Tunde FatundeHigher education has a leading role to play in championing the kind of gender equality that empowers both women and men, according to high-level participants in a ministerial panel held on the final day of the Association of Commonwealth Universities 2016 conference. GLOBAL Brennan WeissVenture creation programmes are still somewhat novel in higher education. Relatively few universities offer real-world entrepreneurial degrees and their implementation is often complicated by a lack of funding and faculty motivation. GLOBAL Tunde FatundeThe role of religious faith in combating extremism on university campuses was a central focus of two sessions at the Association of Commonwealth Universities conference, as participants reflected on the effects and implications of multiple terror attacks in 2015. GLOBAL Tunde FatundeHistorical injustice and reparations came under the spotlight at the recent Association of Commonwealth Universities conference, with calls made for greater support for student demands in South Africa and a ‘Marshall Plan’ to uplift the Caribbean region. GLOBAL Brennan WeissCorporate social responsibility has been a fixture in the business world for decades, and has become embedded in many universities as higher education leaders seek alternative ways to achieve sustainability. AFRICA Tunde FatundeA major topic tackled at the recent Association of Commonwealth Universities conference was opportunities and barriers in African higher education. Access for more of the continent’s fast-growing young population turned out to be both an opportunity and a challenge, while low funding was identified as the major obstacle. SIERRA LEONE Francis KokutseThe government of Sierra Leone has promised to provide more scholarships to students in higher education institutions to help cushion the effects of the Ebola disease, which led to an increase in fees, said former vice-chancellor of the University of Sierra Leone, Jonas Redwood-Sawyerr. 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 number of Indian students going overseas for undergraduate and postgraduate studies is expected to increase by 50% over the next five years due to a manifold increase in their family incomes, reports the Press Trust of India. UNITED STATES An Education Trust report shows that the top 4% of colleges and universities hold three quarters of all endowment wealth in higher education, yet four in five of those 138 institutions expect the neediest families to hand over more than 60% of their income to cover the cost of attendance, writes Danielle Douglas-Gabriel for The Washington Post. NETHERLANDS Over a third of all international students who graduated from Dutch universities have remained in the Netherlands five years later, according to a report from EP-Nuffic on the rate of retention of foreign students, writes Natalie Marsh for The PIE News. UNITED KINGDOM Data shows that private schools extended their lead over state schools in getting pupils into England's universities after higher fees were introduced, reports Hannah Richardson for the BBC. SOUTH AFRICA South African universities are currently struggling financially and the situation is worsened by the huge, ballooning debt owed to the institutions by students, the Commission of Inquiry into Higher Education and Training chaired by Justice Jonathan Arthur Heher heard last week, reports Africa News Agency. FINLAND Finnish universities have agreed on common measures to protect Turkish researchers working in Finland from being purged in the aftermath of the coup attempt in Turkey, reports Xinhua. AFGHANISTAN The American University of Afghanistan was expected to reopen last week, days after being closed in the wake of the kidnapping of two teachers, reports Reuters. TAIWAN Twenty-three universities are facing enrolment shortfalls this year, with six private institutions seeing only half of their expected numbers, a trend some experts said was a direct result of the nation’s declining birth rate, write Wu Po-hsuan and Willian Hetherington for Taipei Times. GHANA The bill to convert six out of the 10 polytechnics into fully-fledged universities received the unanimous approval of Ghanaian legislators on 3 August, reports Ghana Web. ISRAEL The heads of academic institutions warned last week that the opening of the upcoming academic year would be in jeopardy if planned budget cuts to the higher education system were to pass, reports The Jerusalem Post. AUSTRALIA A new Grattan Institute report shows that while government and industry are urging more young people to study STEM – science, technology, engineering and mathematics – courses, science graduates have a hard time finding their first job, writes Tim Dodd for the Australian Financial Review. UNITED KINGDOM Elite universities are offering ‘buy-one-get-one-free’ degrees to lure A-grade students, it has emerged, as they ramp up their efforts to attract top-flight students, writes Javier Espinoza for The Telegraph. SOUTH AFRICA Universities might appear to be on the back foot after a tumultuous year, but their scientific research work is booming, writes Tanya Farber for Times Live. UNITED KINGDOM Scottish universities have called for urgent action to address fears of a £60 million (US$78 million) funding shortfall caused by the Brexit vote, writes Andrew Denholm for Herald Scotland. VIETNAM Freshmen to universities with financial autonomy have called on the universities to publicise tuition fees so that they and their families can manage the sum actively, reports Viet Nam News. UNITED ARAB EMIRATES United Arab Emirates University announced this month that it would start accepting applications from international students for admission to its undergraduate programmes which were previously limited to local students, writes Sami Zaatari for Gulf News.
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