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Nov./Dec.
2002
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Regional
News
FRANCE
Hong Kong, Paris in Business Alliance
The agreement reached by the two institutions states that participants may begin the cooperative program at either institution and must fulfill the admission requirements established by each program.
People's
Daily Online GERMANYGermany Jumps on Business-School Bandwagon
The school aims to attract international students and faculty members, and instruction will be entirely in English. Classes are scheduled to begin in 2003, but the first MBA and master's in public administration (MPA) students will not start until 2004. The school will be Germany's first major business school and has received funding from many big German companies, such as Daimler-Chrysler. So far, it has an endowment of US$91million.
The
Chronicle of Higher Education GREECE
Peloponnesians Welcome Greece's 20th University
The university eventually will have six schools, with three departments each. It is the 20th in Greece and the second in the Peloponnese, after the University of Patras. According to the Department of Education, the five future schools will be distributed among the prefectures of Messinia, Lakonia, Corinthia and Argolida. The exact locations are still to be decided.
GreeceNow REPUBLIC OF IRELANDNorth, South Universities to Collaborate
The
Times Higher Education Supplement Ireland Meets the Challenge of Chinese Students
In addition to classroom issues, there are serious visa concerns being raised by "fly-by-night" schools that are issuing, for a fee, attendance certificates to students who have missed class because of work. Attendance certificates are essential for non-European students wishing to renew permits. Ireland has been the focus of Asian students' attention due to the marketing, by language schools, of Ireland as a center for quality learning. Couple this with Ireland's "lax" visa procedures at its embassies and consulates in China, and you have a flood of students arriving from the East. Chinese agents, working for foreign language schools, are encouraging students with limited English to apply because of the small chance of an interview being carried out by the embassy. In contrast, the British Embassy interviews all visa applicants. Schools are now coming under closer scrutiny, and 10 schools are being investigated. The Advisory Council for English Language Schools (ACLES) operates a non-mandatory licensing scheme and recognizes 104 schools that enroll 80 percent of the 200,000 language students in Ireland. ACLES, in association with the Departments of Justice and Foreign Affairs, will be stepping up a publicity campaign encouraging students to apply only to recognized schools, while schools themselves will link into more stringent visa renewal procedures and apply stricter attendance records.
Irish Times UNITED KINGDOM
Manchester Merger to Create 'World Class' University
It is hoped the merger will allow the new university to apply for larger research grants and to offer more student places. The merged universities will be able to offer places to almost 30,000 students - more than any other in the United Kingdom. The new university will be functioning under its new name, as yet undecided, by 2004.
BBC News UK Merger Update Pending: Manchester
and University of Manchester Institute
of Science and Technology Clinched: London
Guildhall and University of North
London Failed: Birmingham
and Aston
The
Guardian A-Level Fiasco Ends with Minister's Resignation
In mid-September, Morris requested an independent inquiry into allegations that exam boards had lowered A-level grades under pressure from the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA). The authority feared too many top grades in the newly restructured university entrance exams. The resulting report from Mike Tomlinson, chairman of the inquiry, placed the blame for the confusion on the complexity of Curriculum 2000 and the structure of the new AS/A2 awards. Changes to the system, known as Curriculum 2000, altered the traditional three-course focus of the A-level to allow students to pursue five courses during the first year at the Advanced Subsidiary Level (AS-level) before narrowing their course load to a maximum of three subjects in the second year of the A-level (A2). The new AS-level counts as 50 percent of the total A-level. As the A2 is intended to be more difficult than the AS-level, the two scores are to balance each other out and maintain the same standard as the old A-level. When it emerged that this year's A-levels would produce unusually high marks, accusations arose that grade boundaries had been changed at the last minute, thus influencing students' expected results. The claims of downgrading eventually proved to be bogus, as only 0.5 percent of the 300,000 re-marked units were upgraded. Despite the apparent justification of the system, basic flaws remain. Attempts to broaden the education base of sixth formers, while maintaining the "gold standard" of three A-levels is considered, by many, as unrealistic and unworkable. This has instigated calls for a complete restructure of the system, or the introduction of a new system based on the baccalaureate program. The baccalaureate would provide the broader-based system favored by the head-teachers associations and both political parties, although many secondary schools have responded with trepidation over implementing a new system after two years of wrestling with the revised A-levels. Proposal May Scrap Degree Classifications
Academics and administrators who met recently described the present system as an archaic "blunt instrument" and agreed to develop plans for an alternative. The proposals were leaked from a strategy document on higher education, and according to the Times Higher Education Supplement, sources from the Department for Education and Skills have confirmed that the classification system is under review. Higher Education Minister Margaret Hodge is said to be concerned that grade inflation is undermining the credibility of the present system.
The
Times Higher Education Supplement New U.K. Education Web site Launched
Education
Travel Bristol
Tries Out SAT
Daily
Telegraph Report Seeks Overhaul of Scottish Education
The report, published by the Lifelong Learning Committee, makes key recommendations, including plans to combine higher education funding to create one tertiary sector system. Other recommendations include providing financial support to part-time, low-income learners and conducting further research into the potential of "business learning accounts" to encourage workplace training. The main focuses of the report are to encourage lifelong learning and widen access to traditional and nontraditional forms of tertiary education. Alex Neil, convener of the committee, said the goal was to address the skills shortage and the unplugged talent. The committee hopes to provide access to the 50 percent of the population that do not go to university. Ministers were due to debate the report's findings Nov. 27, 2002.
The
Guardian Research Center Launched at Queen's University
While building
work may have just started, the center's work is already under way, with
more than 30 internationally renown physicists from around the globe having
been selected as distinguished visiting professors and fellows. These
researchers will spend from three months to one year collaborating with
staff from the center. In addition, 10 international students have arrived to study for their doctorates while working on IRCEP projects.
Queen's
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