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The week in higher education - 12 December 2013

Published on
December 12, 2013
Last updated
May 22, 2015
  • Boat Race protester Trenton Oldfield has won his fight to stay in the UK after a judge overturned his deportation order, 罢丑别听滨苍诲别辫别苍诲别苍迟 reported on 10聽December. The 37-year-old Australian, who served six weeks of a six-month jail sentence for disrupting last year鈥檚 Varsity Boat Race, had faced separation from his British wife and child because his presence in the UK was deemed 鈥渘ot conducive to the public good鈥. However, rejecting the claim, Judge Kevin Moore told Oldfield that there was 鈥渘o doubt to your character and commitment and the value you are to the UK generally鈥. Among those supporting Mr聽Oldfield were several Oxbridge dons, who questioned the 鈥渄raconian鈥 attempt to deport him. 鈥淚t makes it look like we have a real hang-up about stepping slightly out of line,鈥 said Danny Dorling, professor of geography at the University of Oxford.
  • David Cameron鈥檚 old college tutor is offering him private tips on how to run the country, The Daily Telegraph reported on 4聽December. The prime minister told an audience at Shanghai University that Vernon Bogdanor 鈥 emeritus fellow at Brasenose College, Oxford, where Mr Cameron spent his undergraduate days 鈥 emails critiques of聽his performance, the paper said. 鈥淭hough I聽left 25 years ago [he] still sends me emails criticising my work,鈥 Mr Cameron said. Bogdanor, who is now a research professor at King鈥檚 College London, has labelled the prime minister as 鈥渙ne of the ablest鈥 students he has taught, but has criticised his former pupil鈥檚 desire to scrap the Human Rights Act, calling his stance 鈥渃onfused鈥.
  • Nobel laureate Peter Higgs would fail to land an academic job today because he is no good at 鈥渃hurning out papers鈥, the eminent physicist told The Guardian. In an interview published on 7聽December, Professor Higgs claimed that no university would employ him today because he was not 鈥減roductive鈥 enough: he has published fewer than 10 papers since 1964. Saying he was 鈥渁n embarrassment to the department when they did research assessment exercises鈥, the聽physicist said he responded to departmental requests for recent publications with the terse reply, 鈥渘one鈥. Speaking en route to Stockholm to collect the Nobel Prize in Physics on 10聽December, the 84-year-old said that the University of Edinburgh would have probably sacked him if he had not been nominated for the prize in 1980.
  • Professor Higgs was not the only 2013 Nobel laureate to question the modern-day world of聽academic publishing. Randy Schekman, professor of cell and developmental biology at the University of California, Berkeley, chose the day of the acceptance ceremony to announce that his lab would no longer publish in 鈥渓uxury journals鈥 such as Cell, Nature 补苍诲听Science. He wrote in 罢丑别听骋耻补谤诲颈补苍 on 10聽December that the huge career rewards for publishing in such journals led scientists to play to the publications鈥 scientifically damaging preference for 鈥減apers that explore sexy subjects or make challenging claims鈥. In extreme cases, scientists might even commit research fraud to get published, he added. Professor Schekman is, of course, editor-in-chief of eLife, an open-access journal launched last year to rival Cell, Science and Nature, so his comments may be taken with a pinch of salt. Also, as a Nobel laureate, he is never going to be short of job offers. Although one of his postdoctoral researchers was quoted endorsing his position, others may fear for their future without 鈥渓uxury鈥 papers on their CVs.
  • Universities are sometimes criticised for their harsh disciplinary measures, but a Saudi institution has taken matters to shocking extremes. According to the Emirates 24/7 news website on 8聽December, a Saudi woman received 80 lashes in front of the entire university staff in the northern town of Rafha for assaulting a聽faculty member. The woman, in her forties, had stormed on to campus to confront the employee because she had also married her husband, the site said. She聽was sentenced to one month in prison in addition to the public lashing. The Emirates piece quoted a report from the Sharq newspaper, and reprinted its聽picture of the cruel and unusual punishment.

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