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| March/April 2004 | Volume
17, Issue 2 |
PRACTICAL
INFORMATION REGIONAL
NEWS FEATURE
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Regional
News
Europe GERMANYProgram Helps 1,500 Study in Eastern Europe
The
Times Higher Education Supplement Jewish-American University Opens in Berlin
Campus-Germany Bavaria Launches ‘Elite Network’
Rather than concentrating on the development of just one or two universities, Bavarian ministers want each university to offer first-class programs to the best national and international students, alongside what is currently available. The chosen projects at nine of the state’s 11 universities will form part of an “elite Bavarian network” that the state of Bavaria will support with the creation of 233 jobs and — together with business and industry — US$16.8 million. According to Education Minister Thomas Goppel, these programs will be characterized by their inherent breadth and depth and will reflect the top-quality research being carried out in Bavaria. Students will be expected to complete the programs in less time than normal degree programs while delving further into the subject. Program offerings are mainly in the sciences and range from applied mathematics to cellular biology.
Campus-Germany HUNGARYMore Graduate; Fewer Find Jobs
Because university funding levels are determined by the number of students they enroll, schools are still heavily recruiting applicants. Coupled with the rise in unemployment is an apparent decrease in the average compensation that graduates can now expect. At the candidate.hu online job fair for university and college students, newly graduated economists, computer scientists and engineers were looking for starting salaries of US$971, based on the fact that graduates in the second half of the 1990s were finding positions with a starting salary of US$1,068. But now, economics majors who graduate with no special qualifications are typically offered approximately US$364 per month. In 1990, there were 24,100 graduates; in 2003, 47,200 people age 18 to 24 graduated from a college or a university. Since the collapse of communism, the number of students has almost tripled; today there are almost 400,000 students pursuing higher education. In addition, the government is seeking more graduates through a policy whose aim is to have every second member of the younger generation in college by 2010. Since schools are subsidized on the basis of the number of students they enroll, a place is found for almost every applicant.
Nepszabadsag SLOVAK REPUBLICCabinet Forced to Abandoned Tuition Fee Proposals
One day after the Cabinet put off the introduction of tuition fees at universities, students at Comenius University, the largest university in Slovakia, decided to join the strike alert announced by university students all over the country March 3. The protesters have assumed that the Cabinet is pursuing a hidden purpose by withdrawing the proposal. Concerns also have been raised that fees would cause a brain drain to the neighboring Czech Republic, where young Slovaks would be able to study free of charge.
The Slovak Spectator
UNITED KINGDOMTop Universities Awarding More ‘Firsts’
According to the Economist magazine, the economics of generous markings are straightforward. When the many who are merely good get the same top grades as the few who are truly brilliant, there are more winners than losers; marking more toughly creates the opposite scenario. If universities admit the problem at all, the most they are likely to do is introduce new top grades, as witnessed recently at Harvard University, where President Larry Summers called for a new A-plus and an A-double-plus at the school, notorious for awarding half its students As.
The Guardian EU Expansion a Mixed Bag for Higher Education
The report, “Projecting Demand for UK Higher Education From the Accession Countries,” warns that the government must increase its financial support to meet the increased demand, or else risk harming the quality of an already overburdened and under-financed system of higher education. The flip side, according to the report, is that the predicted influx will add up to US$150 million a year to the UK economy. The report expects between 20,000 and 30,000 students from the 10 expansion countries to be studying at British universities by 2010. Beginning in September, undergraduates from these countries will pay the home fee of £1,125 instead of overseas fees of between £7,000 and £8,000 — and because incomes are lower, they may not have to pay fees at all. Demand for higher education has grown rapidly in the accession states in recent years and has led to the growth of private fee-paying universities, so the prospect of paying fees is unlikely to deter students from going to the United Kingdom, argues the report.
The Daily Telegraph Scotland: Special Visas Extended for Foreign Graduates
Visas will be extended for overseas students who graduate from Scottish universities after September 2005 for two years. The visa gives students more time to find jobs, increasing the six-month grace period allowed under current rules. The plan fits into the framework of the Scottish government’s policy to halt population decline: Scotland's population is predicted to fall below 5 million from today's level of 5.05 million by 2009.
The Guardian Online Medical School to be Hosted by Dundee University
The first phase of the project is expected to go live in September.
The Guardian
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