51勛圖

The week in higher education - 8 August 2013

Published on
August 8, 2013
Last updated
May 22, 2015
  • Overseas students from wealthy families are renting some of Londons most desirable and expensive flats, the Evening Standard reported on 1 August. One estate agent said that at the new 65Duke Street development off Bond Street, where rents start at 瞿1,950 a week, about athird of tenants are overseas students. Areview by agents Wetherell and the market intelligence group Dataloft found that foreign students made up 35per cent of all Mayfair tenants in the 瞿750 to 瞿999 aweek price band and 25per cent in the 瞿1,000 to 瞿1,999 band. A flawed market has helped produce some of the highest prices in the world but at least Englands higher education system isnt as dysfunctional as its property system.
  • A US psychology professor has been outed as a killer who murdered his family as a teenager and was committed to a mental hospital for only six years after being found insane. James Wolcott shot his parents and older sister in 1967 when he was 15 years old. After his release, he changed his name to James StJames and built an academic career at an Illinois Presbyterian institution, Millikin University. The professors past was revealed after alocal newspaper investigation, the Daily Mail reported on 3August. The university gave strong backing to the academic and said that he would stay on. Given the traumatic experiences of his childhood, Dr StJames efforts to rebuild his life and obtain a successful professional career have been remarkable, Millikin said in a statement.
  • In an excruciating press release headed Advertising space: the final frontier, the University of Sheffield said on 5 August that it had sent a billboard into space advertising its Go Higher campaign aimed at attracting high quality Ucas applications from students during this years clearing process. An accompanying video shows a laminated Go Higher card attached to a balloon rising above green fields and into the dark stratosphere. We have launched hundreds of thousands of people into the academic, professional, political and artistic stratosphere over the years and this campaign is a direct appeal to students who have set their sights higher, said Gavin Douglas, Sheffields head ofstudent recruitment, admissions, international relations and feeble, overextended puns.
  • River Plate, one of Argentinas leading football clubs, has set up a university said to be the first institution of its kind operated by a football club anywhere in the world (although England does have UCFB, a college offering degrees that has a base at Burnley Football Club). Seventy students have entered the recently inaugurated River Plate University, the AFP news agency reported on 5August. The Buenos Aires club now has an entire educational system, having already set up a kindergarten, a primary school and a secondary school. The university offers four areas of study: sports marketing, sports administration, business administration and physical education. Being an Argentine football institution, it is likely to offer students a handson learning experience.
  • Liberal Democrat members will be asked to endorse the current 瞿9,000 tuition fees system as the partys official policy while comprehensively ruling out a graduate tax. The proposal, which is to be voted on at the upcoming Lib Dem autumn conference and which was revealed in conference papers published on 6 August, is likely to encounter fierce opposition from some delegates. Although the majority of Lib Dem MPs voted to treble fees or abstained from voting on the issue in 2010, the partys current official policy, decided by its conference, remains that it will phase out fees. Conference delegates will also be asked to support plans to create asingle higher education regulator, to set up areview looking at the impact of the student loan system on the national debt, to introduce a postgraduate loans system offering loans of up to 瞿10,000 ayear, and to remove international students from the immigration figures. But do bear in mind that if the Lib Dems end up in coalition after the next election, they might turn around and do the exact opposite of any of this.

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT