Posts Tagged: universities


15
Nov 09

Who should go to college?

The Chronicle of Higher Ed has an engaging panel discussion on the topic online. The participants talk past one another and spout a variety of things we’ve all heard or thought before, but it’s interesting nonetheless.

The take-home point seems to be that there’s not so much a lack of consensus on this (although there may be) as a lack of consensus as to how to answer the question, or what the precise question even is.

In any case, the mounting crisis–too many students in over-large classes, taught by too many grad student and too few professors, who are educating them more and more in things they need less and less–is, of course, entirely unresolved. Ask in a generation, or even a decade, and the answer may, sadly, be the same. But if they are, the tone will be a good deal more heated.


13
Nov 09

Institutional egoism

From a ScienceBlogs post about good academic manners:

If you went to an Ivy League or other school you think is better than ours, you needn’t preface statements with, “when I was at BigBlatheryU. . .” Extra points deducted if you actually didn’t earn a degree there but still have to say you “were there.” Your insecurity will show and your colleagues will make up drinking games about how often or how early in a discussion you bring up the topic.

Now that’s a game I’d like to start playing.


10
Nov 09

Missed Halloween, but….

The good citizens of Bloody Discusting, a horror film news site, have a trailer up for a Thai horror flick called Haunted Universities. None of it makes much sense that I can work up (being as I don’t read or speak Thai), but it looks not to be missed.


31
Oct 09

Research funding in Canada by institution

A helpful rundown here of where the money is in Canadian research universities. Nothing terribly surprising (the rather low figures appear to me to represent only total individual government grants).

However, it’s interesting to be reminded nonetheless that there is–rightly or wrongly–a pecking order. A quick look at the original source indicated that  it’s pecking order with a pretty stark degree of stratification. Across 50 schools, the most funded received about 150 times more than the least. So, as you fill out those SSHRC forms, don’t imagine that your address doesn’t matter.


28
Oct 09

With adminstrators like these…

… who needs a dictatorial state? Academic staff at St Petersburg State U have been ordered to submit for adminstrative approval all documents to be sent abroad for publication, for grant applications, and so on.

The move is putatively intended to bring the university in line with security regulations introduced in the early 1990s to prevent nuclear smuggling an the like. It is, however, directed as much at the social sciences and humanities as anything else.

The change is noteworthy, in part because it is being introduced at the prestigious institution where President Dmitri A. Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin studied law, and where Mr. Medvedev taught for nine years.

But some on the faculty are complaining that the new vision is authoritarian. In the spring, after the dean of the journalism school sharply criticized the rector’s policies, the president of the university filed charges against her, alleging libel and embezzlement. Students picketing in her favor were arrested.


20
Oct 09

Three year BA?

Here in Canada it’s still substantially possible to get one,*at least at a few schools–although, the momentum is away from the practice. An engaging Newsweek article, however, has this trending the other way in the States:

Hartwick college, a small liberal-arts school in upstate New York, makes this offer to well-prepared students: earn your undergraduate degree in three years (six semesters) instead of four, and save about $43,000—the amount of one year’s tuition and fees. A number of innovative colleges are making the same offer to students anxious about saving time and money. The three-year degree could become the higher-education equivalent of the fuel-efficient car. And that’s both an opportunity and a warning for the best higher-education system in the world.

There’s plenty wrong with the argument at the margins (the author also blames tenure for stifling academic debate), but the key problem is elsewhere. Matthew Yglesias hits it on the head:

…the claim you’d want to make as a proprietor of a three-year college is something like “our students get 95 percent of the learning in 75 percent of the time and at 80 percent of the cost.” But we don’t have any systems in place to measure, even very roughly or extremely imprecisely, how effective different colleges are at actually teaching people. Instead we have this kind of prestige-based economy of higher education in which basically nothing can change. There’s an aristocracy of fancy private institutions that raise tons of money and get tons of applications and can thus be very selective in their admissions and raise tons more money. And in any given state university system, a couple of campus are designated as the “good” ones so they get the best applicants and thus wind up with the best students and thus stay as the good ones. The other branch campuses tend to languish in semi-obscurity.

The Brits, notably, have this sorted out, more or less. Indeed, they practice this sort of assessment right down to the student level, with redundant grading major assignments. This is, of course, expensive, and is probably predicated on a public university system. Private institutions like Harvard wouldn’t likely stand for this sort of assessment. They would risk being ranked below public institutions, something reputation alone doesn’t likely permit.

Still, it’s a good point, and it raises the larger (and older) question of what value lies in a jarringly priced education at a private university. Reputation? Well, perhaps that’s just what’s in doubt.

* Key difference here is that in Canada one gets the degree with fewer credits–hense the movement away from it, in line with degree/education inflation generally.


19
Oct 09

The greatest universities in the World

… are listed, as they are anually, by the THES. Read ‘em and grin or suffer along with your institution of choice/convenience/necessity. If, that is, you believe these things. Of course, if you don’t, you know someone else does, so… Well, it’s out there. I hope your guilt by association isn’t too bad.


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