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09 October 2016 | Issue 431 | Register to receive our free e-newspaper by email each week | Advanced Search |
NEWSLETTER Can we make ethical internationalisation of HE for all the norm?![]() With the focus on internationalisation in our Transformative Leadership series, in which University World News is partnering with The MasterCard Foundation, Hans de Wit writes that ethical internationalisation of higher education involves the expansion of internationalisation to all, not restricting it to a small elite. In Commentary, Steve Fuller discusses the role of contemporary universities in society in light of the popular call to ignore experts made by leading ‘Leave’ campaigners during the UK’s Brexit campaign. Jeannie Rea bemoans the deteriorating experience of international students in Australia, whom she alleges are increasingly being treated as a source of export income. And Ranjit Goswami says more universities should adopt an outward-looking focus like the top universities, setting up international exchanges and internships to benefit a wider number of students around the world. In World Blog, Patrick Blessinger explores the recent evolution of doctoral education, which has moved towards more interdisciplinary programmes that prepare students for a variety of positions in and out of academia. In Features, Simon Marginson says the United States needs to regain a positive notion of higher education for the common good and to implement a federal system of tuition funding grounded in income-contingent student loans. And Brendan O'Malley reports on a paper that questions whether Asian universities are pursuing top rankings at the expense of diversification, and makes the case for adopting liberal arts education more widely. Online technology will open up global engagement in higher education, reports Nicola Jenvey following the international webinar entitled 'Embracing Technology for Global Engagement: A leadership challenge and opportunity', hosted by University World News in partnership with DrEducation last Tuesday. Brendan O’Malley – Managing Editor
NEWS: Our correspondents worldwide report ![]() EUROPE Brendan O'MalleyIn at least 20 out of 24 European countries, funding for higher education has either been cut or has not kept pace with increases in student numbers, according to new data published by the 2016 Public Funding Observatory. SINGAPORE Yojana SharmaIn a lawsuit that, if it is successful, could have major implications for the way United States universities teach degrees in overseas branch campuses, three former students of New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts in Singapore are suing NYU, alleging its now defunct branch in Singapore failed to provide the quality of education they expected. NORTH KOREA Yojana SharmaNorth Korea’s top higher education institution, Kim Il-sung University in the capital Pyongyang, must advance to become a “world-class institution”, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has said in a letter to students, staff and professors of Pyongyang’s institution. ALGERIA Wagdy SawahelAlgeria has unveiled a new roadmap for higher education and research in efforts to build a knowledge-based economy by raising educational standards, improving the employability of graduates and revitalising research. UNITED KINGDOM Brendan O'MalleyHome Secretary Amber Rudd has announced that major new restrictions on overseas students will form a key part of the government’s commitment to reduce immigration. The government will consult on whether to link student visas to the quality of courses and institution with a view to cutting the number of international students at some universities. EUROPE Jan Petter MyklebustLERU, the League of European Research Universities with 21 member universities in Western Europe, and a group of seven research universities in Central and Eastern Europe have agreed to work together on key challenges, including within the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research programme, and improve research conditions across the continent. SOUTH AFRICA Munyaradzi MakoniA multi-stakeholder forum at which the piloting of a fee-free funding model for students from poor and working-class families was announced has failed to bring an end to ongoing student unrest across the country’s campuses. THAILAND Yojana Sharma and Mimi LeungA Hong Kong activist who was deported before being due to address the 40th anniversary commemoration of the Thammasat University massacre, in which students were hung from trees, burnt alive or shot by militias, was allowed to address students via Skype on Thursday. AFRICA Wachira KigothoA scarcity of funds for research and lack of academic freedom in universities across Sub-Saharan Africa are key drivers to low academic scholarship, including inequalities research, according to a joint report by UNESCO, the International Social Science Council and the University of Sussex. EGYPT Ashraf KhaledA call by a member of the Egyptian parliament to subject female university applicants to virginity tests has outraged academics and women’s advocates in this conservative Middle East country. GERMANY Michael GardnerStudents in Germany are having increasing difficulty in finding accommodation, according to a recent survey covering major university cities. In the majority of the cities examined, the housing situation for students appears to have worsened. COMMENTARY ![]() UNITED KINGDOM Steve FullerThe Brexit campaign included calls to ignore experts, but were these more about questioning the establishment than a symptom of anti-intellectualism and is this questioning not something that should be at the heart of university life? AUSTRALIA Jeannie ReaThere is an undercurrent of exploitation, poverty, loneliness and despair about the deteriorating experience of international students, who over recent years are increasingly being treated more as a source of export income than as people. INDIA Ranjit GoswamiInternational exchanges, internships and summer programmes are important ways of broadening students’ perspective and options, and students studying in the most poorly resourced institutions have the most to gain from them. TRANSFORMATIVE LEADERSHIP ![]() GLOBAL Hans de WitInternationalisation of higher education has the power to lead social transformation through preparing students to deal with pressing global issues, but it should not be restricted to a small elite. WEBINAR ![]() GLOBAL Nicola JenveyOnline learning as a phenomenon must evolve into an accepted form, entrenched as a culture rather than a separate entity within institutions, as there is little point in denying the increasingly significant role it will play in delivering higher education, participants were told in the webinar “Embracing Technology for Global Engagement: A leadership challenge and opportunity” hosted by University World News in partnership with DrEducation last week. WORLD BLOG ![]() GLOBAL Patrick BlessingerDoctoral education is moving from preparation for a life in academia towards more interdisciplinary programmes that prepare students for a variety of positions in and out of academia and candidates are becoming more diverse. FEATURES ![]() UNITED STATES Simon MarginsonThe Master Plan for Higher Education in California in the 1960s generated the world’s most influential system of public higher education, promoting the widening of access while strengthening excellence. But it was undermined by the California tax revolt. The solution is a federal system of higher education tuition funding grounded in income-contingent student loans. ASIA Brendan O'MalleyCountries haunted by graduate underemployment and unemployment should ask whether universities are pursuing top rankings at the expense of diversification. Adopting liberal arts education more widely would help equip more students for our increasingly complex world. GLOBAL Jeffrey R Young, The Chronicle of Higher EducationBack when colleges first started experimenting with teaching online, pundits mused that competition for college students would one day be global. It seemed like possibly a crazy thing to predict, but that day is now here. So what does it mean for universities? GLOBAL Nicola JenveyResearch and knowledge gathered in the field was worthless if it did not become community property – and that did not necessarily happen via journal publications. This point was raised in the keynote address at the 10th annual Teaching and Learning in Higher Education Conference held in South Africa in late September. 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 Hillary Clinton announced her new higher education plan this summer with a burst of fanfare, promising to invest US$500 billion to eliminate tuition for millions of students at public colleges and universities across the country. But while the liberal wing of the party has cheered the idea, many in education have questioned how such a plan would work, writes Alan Rappeport for The New York Times. VIETNAM About 400,000 students finish universities every year, but most of them cannot satisfy employers and they need to undergo retraining at their place of work. Therefore, businesses now tend to order universities to produce workers who can meet their standards, reports VietNamNet Bridge. TURKEY Turkish authorities last weekend detained 15 staff from one of the country’s oldest universities in the latest raids against suspects allegedly linked to the failed 15 July coup, reports AFP. NORWAY Norway's right-wing government recently announced plans to ban the full-face Islamic veil from classrooms and university lecture halls, reports AFP. INDIA In an analysis of the gender ratio of faculty members in 28 prominent Central universities in India, women faculty members constitute only one-quarter of the total teachers, writes Kritika Sharma for Daily News and Analysis. AUSTRALIA Job prospects for Australian university graduates are declining, with a new study showing fewer and fewer people are finding full-time employment after completing higher education, writes Tim Lamacraft for ABC News. ZIMBABWE Three University of Zimbabwe graduates stunned President Robert Mugabe and other senior government officials when they staged surprise protests during this year's recent graduation ceremony, demanding jobs, writes Obey Manayiti for The Standard. PAKISTAN The Higher Education Commission has decided to wind up 19 PhD and 15 MS and MPhil programmes at various public and private universities in Punjab over the universities’ failure to fulfil minimum requirements, writes Ammar Sheikh for The Express Tribune. THAILAND A growing number of university graduates are finding themselves unqualified to practise their intended vocation because their courses are not certified by professional organisations, writes Dumrongkiat Mala for the Bangkok Post. KENYA The national government has ordered a special investigation into financial mismanagement at several public universities, writes Ouma Wanzala for the Daily Nation. BELGIUM A new international student accommodation space, a project of two universities in Brussels, is planned to be developed in Belgium’s capital, writes Natalie Marsh for The PIE News. SOUTH AFRICA New research shows that two-thirds of matriculants with bachelor passes go to university, and that university access of qualifying students is not biased against black or poor students. For every 100 students who start school in South Africa, only 12 go to university, and only four of them get a degree within six years, reports MyBroadband. AUSTRALIA Australia's top-ranked global university is moving to lower its proportion of Chinese international students, a group it describes as "dominating" international student numbers, write Alexander Joske, Kelsey Munro and Philip Wen for The Sydney Morning Herald. HONG KONG A top Hong Kong university said last week it wouldn't take action against students who hung a pro-independence banner on its campus to mark Chinese National Day, in spite of calls from the city's chief executive to sanction any talk of independence in universities, reports Radio Free Asia. CANADA A Canadian professor has recorded two hour-long YouTube lectures criticising his university’s policy on ‘political correctness’ and objecting to government legislation that would prohibit discrimination based on gender identity and gender expression, writes Ellie Bothwell for Times Higher Education.
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