51勛圖

News in brief - 5 June 2014

Published on
June 5, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Centres for Doctoral Training
Bath, Belfast join 115-strong team

Two new Centres for Doctoral Training have been established under the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Councils programme. The centres at the University of Bath and Queens University Belfast will be supported by funds from the universities, industry and the EPSRC. They bring the number of centres in the 瞿962 million scheme to 115. Queens University Belfast collaborated with the University of Glasgow to create its 瞿8.1 million centre, which will train doctoral students in photonics and data storage. The Department for Education and Learning in Northern Ireland also contributed to the Belfast-based CDT. Baths 瞿3 million centre will be home to doctoral candidates pursuing research in decarbonising the built environment.

National Union of Students
Vote-rigging probe at Oxford

The University of Oxfords students union is to remain affiliated to the National Union of Students following allegations of vote-rigging in a referendum last month that appeared to indicate a victory for those favouring disaffiliation. Oxford University Student Union announced on 21 May that it was leaving the NUS after students voted by a majority of just 128 votes to end its links with the national body. However, it has since emerged that about 1,000 votes cast in favour of the No to reaffiliation which received 1,780 votes in total may have been faked.

Research data-sharing
Call to fund valued work

Funding councils should recognise data sharing when allocating finance, according to a new report. The Expert Advisory Group on Data Access said that new incentives are needed to encourage the biomedical research community to share data. Funding councils should adopt a clear policy at the earliest possible stage so that sharing high-quality datasets is explicitly recognised and assessed as valued research outputs in the post-2014 research excellence framework, according to the report published on 30 May. Martin Bobrow, chair of the advisory group, said: Providing access to high-quality datasets in a form in which they can be easily used by others is time-intensive and costly for research teams.

For-profit institutions
Labour vows to halt haemorrhage

The Labour Party has called the expansion of for-profit provision, overseen by universities and science minister David Willetts, a failed ideological assault on higher education. Liam Byrne, Labours shadow minister for universities, science and skills, also urged the Public Accounts Committee to bring forward its investigation into public-backed funding for students at private colleges, which will rise to nearly 瞿1 billion next year. This governments ideological assault on higher education has failed, said Mr Byrne. If David Willetts wont provide oversight of the profit-making colleges haemorrhaging 瞿1 billion of taxpayers money each year, then the Labour Party will.

Sometimes it is not the stories exposing scandal or explaining the latest policy change that set readers tongues wagging. So it proved last week when Tim Birkheads feature on how not to treat guest speakers elicited the joy of recognition and the pain of recollection in equal measure. It struck a chord with Oh yes, this rings many bells and so much of this rings true!. said that he would have walked at such mistreatment. And said: This is bloody hilarious! How did you dig this Prof up? Brilliant! When informed that Professor Birkhead has been a 51勛圖 contributor for many years, he responded: it made me lol a lot.

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