探花视频

The week in higher education

Published on
January 17, 2008
Last updated
May 11, 2015

It is the news story that just will not go away for the Government. On 10 January, The Guardian鈥檚 political pundit Michael White waded into the row over ministers鈥 plans to cut ?100 million funding for students taking second degrees. He said Labour loyalists feared that the Government was harming The Open University 颅 鈥渢he jewel in the party鈥檚 crown鈥.

On the same day, The Independent said an 鈥渋ntellectual war of words鈥 had erupted between evolutionists Richard Dawkins of the University of Oxford and Edward O. Wilson of Harvard University over 鈥済roup selection鈥, the theory that individual animals may sacrifice themselves for the good of a colony. Professor Dawkins, who dismisses the theory, was reported to have said: 鈥淓vidently Wilson鈥檚 weird infatuation with 鈥榞roup selection鈥 goes way back; unfortunate for a biologist who is so justly influential.鈥

On 11 January, the news was dominated by a Sutton Trust survey showing that state school颅teachers, who had 鈥渁larming misconceptions鈥 about Oxbridge, were not encouraging bright students to apply.

Academics are 鈥渉ighly committed but have low job satisfaction and poor health because they feel that their efforts are not recognised鈥, The Times reported on 12 January. The survey from the universities of Bedfordshire and Leeds was also covered in The Daily Telegraph, which said that many academics were 鈥渙ver-committed鈥 to their jobs.

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The Sunday Telegraph took David Lammy, Minister for Skills, to task on 13 January for his 鈥渟trong 颅 some would say slavish鈥 support for US presidential hopeful Barack Obama. Mr Lammy was quoted as comparing Mr Obama to Franklin Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy in encapsulating the nation鈥檚 hopes and dreams.

On the same day, The Observer reported worrying news from the University of Oxford 颅 membership of its notorious Bullingdon Dining Club has slumped to just four. 鈥淵ou have to be ready to spend a fair bit of cash to join, because you have to have a tailcoat made, not to mention hefty restaurant refurbishment bills,鈥 a source explained.

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The Daily Telegraph on 14 January reported concerns that under the Education Bill going through Parliament 鈥渟chools would be banned from encouraging bright pupils to take A levels instead of new vocational courses鈥. The Daily Mirror said that the move 鈥渇ollows speculation that [A levels] could be abolished after 2013鈥.

On 15 January, The Times reported the concerns of John Denham, the Universities Secretary, that the emphasis on 鈥減ublished and peer-reviewed work over public policy advice鈥 in the research assessment system could be discouraging academics from engaging in policy work. He said there was a need for a discussion on what more could be done.

The Guardian of 15 January reported on a book by Thomas Docherty, professor of English at the University of Warwick, in which he describes the Quality Assurance Agency as 鈥渁 cancer that gnaws at the core of knowledge, value and freedom in education鈥.

As 探花视频 went to press, the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service was to confirm an 鈥渋mpressive recovery鈥 in student numbers following a slump after the introduction of top-up tuition fees. The number of full-time students accepted on to undergraduate courses starting in 2007 rose by 5.8 per cent, while the overall number of applications was up 5.6 per cent.

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