探花视频

News in brief - 5 December 2013

Published on
December 5, 2013
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Australia
Plea to cut bureaucracy

The main lobbying group for universities in Australia has told the federal government鈥檚 new commission into public spending that some projects brought in under Labor were over-bureaucratic and 鈥渙nerous鈥. Universities Australia has also called for a single reporting body to be set up for universities to avoid replication. In its submission to the government鈥檚 Commission of Audit, the group notes that institutions are required to provide annual financial reports to at least seven separate agencies, The Australian reported. It says much of the information required is too detailed and, in the case of state governments, out of proportion to the funds contributed. Among the Labor initiatives the submission singles out for criticism is the MyUniversity information website, which it calls 鈥渙nerous for institutions to monitor and verify, and is expensive for the government to maintain and develop鈥.

India
An opportunity to go Dutch

Students attending Kolkata鈥檚 Presidency University will in future have the chance to spend time at one of the Netherlands鈥 best-known universities. An agreement signed by the University of Groningen, one of the oldest institutions in the Netherlands, and Presidency means that three students in science subjects and one from the humanities will be offered a 10-month internship at Groningen. 鈥淎s of now the number stands at four, but we are trying to increase it to six students鈥hree in science and three in humanities,鈥 Presidency vice-chancellor Malabika Sarkar told India鈥檚 IANS news service. 鈥淭he host university will take care of the tuition fees, boarding and all other expenses.鈥

United States
Weak STEM performance

About half of US undergraduates in science, technology, engineering and maths leave the field before completing their degree, according to a report from the US Department of Education鈥檚 National Center for Education Statistics. The report calculated the attrition rate in STEM fields and looked at the characteristics of students most likely to abandon such subjects, Inside Higher Ed reported. It used data that tracked students enrolling on a bachelor鈥檚 or associate degree course in the 2003-04 academic year. Of those who had entered a STEM programme, 48聽per cent of bachelor鈥檚 degree candidates had left the field by 2009. The attrition rate was greater for associate degree candidates 鈥 69聽per cent of STEM entrants had left the subject during the course of the study.

China
Protest at political subjugation

An academic and activist for the Uighur ethnic community has attacked moves to prevent students in China鈥檚 troubled northwestern region of Xinjiang from graduating unless they pass a test of political views, Radio Free Asia reported on its website. Education officials in the region said that their institutions were the front line in a 鈥渓ife and death struggle鈥 for the people鈥檚 hearts, according to the Chinese Communist Party鈥檚 official newspaper in the area, the Xinjiang Daily. Students seeking to graduate from the region鈥檚 colleges will be held back unless they pass a political test that requires them to renounce 鈥渆thnic splittism鈥, the paper quoted officials as saying. Ilham Tohti, a Beijing-based economics scholar and critic of China鈥檚 policies towards ethnic minority Uighurs, said: 鈥淭he way they carry out their anti-splittism campaigns is always less intelligent in Xinjiang than it is in other places. It鈥檚 insulting, blatant and draws attention to itself.鈥

United States
Taking an unkind cut

An administrative assistant at a body representing US medical schools has admitted to stealing more than $5 million (拢3 million) from the organisation, according to The Washington Post. Ephonia Green, who earned $56,000 a year at the Association of American Medical Colleges, pleaded guilty at a US District Court to carrying out the theft over an eight-year period. US Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr said in a statement that she faced years in prison 鈥渁s a result of the millions she stole for her own self-indulgence that were initially intended to benefit educational programs鈥. 鈥淲e are truly stunned,鈥 said Darrell G. Kirch, the AAMC鈥檚 president and chief executive, in a statement that referred to Green as a 鈥渓ong-time, trusted employee鈥.

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