Monthly Archive for August, 2011

A Lack of Rigor Leaves Students “Adrift” in College

Staff, NPR Books

As enrollment rates in colleges have continued to increase, a new book questions whether the historic number of young people attending college will actually learn all that much once they get to campus. In Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses, two authors present a study that followed 2,300 students at 24 universities over the course of four years. The study measured both the amount that students improved in terms of critical thinking and writing skills, in addition to how much they studied and how many papers they wrote for their courses.

Richard Arum, a co-author of the book and a professor of sociology at New York University, tells NPR’s Steve Inskeep that the fact that more than a third of students showed no improvement in critical thinking skills after four years at a university was cause for concern.

“Our country today is part of a global economic system, where we no longer have the luxury to put large numbers of kids through college and university and not demand of them that they are developing these higher order skills that are necessary not just for them, but for our society as a whole,” Arum says.

To Read More…

Image:  Wonderlane/Flickr

World Universities Forum Welcomes Marianna Papastephanou as Plenary Speaker

We are pleased to welcome Dr. Marianna Papastephanou as one of our plenary speakers to the 2012 World Universities Forum.

Dr Marianna Papastephanou has studied and taught at the University of Cardiff, UK. She has also studied and researched in Berlin, Germany.  She is currently teaching Philosophy of Education in the Department of Education at the University of Cyprus. Her research interests include political philosophy, the ‘modern vs postmodern’ divide, utopia, the Frankfurt School and epistemological, linguistic and ethical issues in education (e.g. the Idea of the University, Education as Bildung, etc). She has written articles on the above topics, edited a collection of essays by Karl-Otto Apel (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1998), and she is the author of: Educated Fear and Educated Hope (Rotterdam, Sense Publishers, 2009); and Eccentric Cosmopolitanism and a Globalized World (Boulder, Paradigm, 2012).

For more information about our plenary speakers, please visit our website.

Redefining the Public University: Developing an Analytical Framework

By Michael Burawoy, Public Sphere Guide

The university is in crisis, almost everywhere. In the broadest terms, the university’s position as simultaneously inside and outside society, simultaneously participant in and observer of society – always precarious – has been eroded. With the exception of a few hold?outs the ivory tower has gone. We can no longer hold a position of splendid isolation. We can think of the era that has disappeared as the Golden Age of the University, but in reality it was a fool’s paradise that simply couldn’t last. Today, the academy has no option but to engage with the wider society, the question is how, and on whose terms?

In this essay I examine the twin pressures of regulation and commodification to which the university is subject (Market and Regulatory Models), propose a vision of the public university (An Alternative Framing), position that vision within different national contexts (University in the National Context) and then within a global context (The Global Context) before concluding with the assertion of critical engagement and deliberative democracy as central to a redefined public university (What Is To Be Done?).

Market and Regulatory Models

We face enormous pressures of instrumentalization, turning the university into a means for someone else’s end. These pressures come in two forms – commodification and regulation. I teach at the University of California, which had been one of the shining examples of public education in the world. In 2009 it was hit with a 25% cut in public funding. This was a sizable chunk of money. The university has never faced such a financial crisis since the depression and it was forced to take correspondingly drastic steps – laying off large numbers of non?academic staff, putting pressure on already outsourced low?paid service workers, furloughing academics that included many world renowned figures, introducing management consultants to cut costs and increase efficiency. Most significantly it involved a 30% increase in student fees, so that they now rise to over $10,000 a year, but still only a quarter of the price of the best private universities. At the same time, the university is seeking to increase the proportion of students from out of state as these pay substantially more than those from in?state. There has been talk of introducing distance learning and even the shortening of the time to degree.

To Read More…

Now Accepting Nominations for 2011 Higher Education Awards

The World Universities Forum is accepting nominations for its Higher Education Awards. These three awards — for Best Press, Best Policy, and Best Practice — recognize the most significant higher education achievements of 2011. Award recipients will be invited to attend the 2012 World Universities Forum where they will receive their awards. Awardees will also be recognized in the WUF program, press releases, and other forms of publicity.

Best Press: The Best Press Award recognizes outstanding journalistic reporting in 2011 on higher education topics. Nominees may be higher education news stories from any form of media, and any media outlet, provided the intended audience of the reporting extends beyond the confines of narrow academic or policy specializations. The Award will be granted to the individual(s) instrumental to the creation of the news story.

Best Policy: The Best Policy Award recognizes the most significant higher education policies of 2011. Nominees may include innovative and/or far-reaching policies established on institutional, local, national or international levels. The Award will be granted to the individual(s), group(s), organization(s) or institution(s), etc. instrumental to the formulation of the selected policy.

Best Practice: The Best Practice Award recognizes the most significant higher education practices of 2011. Nominees may include, for example: innovative curricula, research projects, student services, etc. The Award will be granted to the individual(s), group(s), organization(s) or institution(s), etc. instrumental to the achievement of these practices.

To submit your nomination, please fill out the nomination form (note: nominations must be submitted by 18 NOVEMBER 2011).

To read more about previous winners, please see our website.

UN Academic Impact a ‘Global Enterprise’

By Yojana Sharma, University World News

What started with just a few universities “and the simple wish to harness academia’s great power for the common good, has become a global enterprise,” said United Nations Secretary-general Ban Ki-Moon, opening the UN Academic Impact (UNAI) forum in the South Korean capital Seoul last week.

In less than a year since the secretary-general launched the Academic Impact at UN headquarters in New York last November, more than 670 universities in 104 countries have joined the initiative, hoping to strengthen the UN’s ability to tackle major problems by harnessing their expertise and research for the global common good.

University teachers and leaders have the means to “serve not one student, not one university, but a global community,” Ban said on Wednesday.

The Seoul forum, held from 9-12 August, was the first ever meeting of all 11 Academic Impact ‘university hubs’. The individual hubs are organised around UN goals and principles such as human rights, sustainability, peace, educational opportunities and eliminating poverty.

To Read More…

Neither Here Nor There

By Matthew Reisz, Times Higher Education

Abdul Al Marsumi once enjoyed a successful career as an academic and television director in Baghdad. He combined his job as a specialist in media at the Al-Mustansiriya University with practical experience. By 1990, he was serving as a cameraman and the director of a popular 45-minute weekly programme called Magazine of Culture.

But that same year, when a student reported to the university authorities that Al Marsumi had told a class he did not support Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait, he lost his academic post. A theatre and cinema that he ran were also shut down after a play was deemed to be critical of the government.

Al Marsumi picked himself up and carried on. Alongside part-time teaching at a university, he secured a position as duty manager with a company supplying broadcasting equipment to the United Nations until, with the US invasion of March 2003, “life stopped, the infrastructure was destroyed and the company looted”.

To Read More…

Praised for Access, Slammed for Lower Quality

By William Patrick Leonard, University World News

The demand for seats in colleges and universities continues to grow across the globe. Parents and their offspring see tertiary education as the path to greater economic, personal and social opportunities that follow receipt of a degree. With the exception of institutions topping the league tables, the majority of colleges and universities earnestly struggle to provide seats to meet this increasing demand. More students are served and not incidentally more revenue is earned.

Higher education has a labour intensive production function that does not lend itself to the productivity gains enjoyed in other industries. Their increasing operational cost must be met with sufficient offsetting revenue each year. Enrolling more students is a relatively easy and popular way to balance budgets. In aggregate, the incoming class lacks the quality of earlier intakes.

Yet while politicians and celebrity pundits applaud these same institutions for responding to increased demand they are simultaneously derided.

To Read More…

Editorial: Missouri, Nation Should Look to China on Education Funding

By the Editorial Board, stltoday.com

As Missouri looks to China for an economic lifeline in the form of foreign trade, the state’s political, civic and business leaders also should take a look at how the Chinese are building their own economy.

It starts with an investment in higher education. That’s something that we here in Missouri, and the United States, have forgotten.

Investment in higher education pays off in terms of measurable economic development — higher salaries, increased tax revenue and innovation. That creates jobs at home and products that can be exported.

The Chinese have figured this out. It’s one reason their economy is growing and ours has been stagnant.

It hasn’t always been this way.

To Read More…

GLOBAL: Do Rankings Promote Trickle Down Knowledge?

By Ellen Hazelkorn, University World News

During the 1980s, US President Ronald Reagan promulgated a strategy for economic growth based on cutting the top tax bracket from 70% to 50% and then to 28%. ‘Trickle down’ economics or ‘Reaganomics’ argued that putting more money in the hands of the elite would create more jobs and lessen inequality.

International evidence, however, shows the results have been the opposite of the one predicted: while there is some benefit eventually for those who are relatively poor, the distribution of income and wealth has been increasingly unequal. In fact, the huge budget deficits facing many countries today are the result of the low taxation policies favoured by this strategy.

Is there a lesson here for the way rankings are being used to justify concentrating resources in a few elite universities? Has self-interest become confused with public interest?

To Read More…