糖心Vlog

Hands off QAA!

Laurie Taylor's weekly bulletin from the University of Poppleton

Published on
May 14, 2015
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Source: Getty

QAA debates the need for more transparency

Our Director of Corporate Affairs, Jamie Targett, has defended the Quality Assurance Agency from accusations of 鈥渃opping out鈥 after it refused to release details of the first successful appeal against its critical findings.

Targett said that it was certainly true that back in 2012 the QAA had produced a critical report on the University of Southampton and that this review had been set aside in 2013 when the university successfully appealed against the findings.

It was also true that the QAA had announced after this successful appeal that the findings would be published. It was also true that just one year later, in 2014, the QAA changed its rules so as to ensure that details of any appeals against its judgements would be kept secret.

Obviously, said Targett, 鈥渁n outsider鈥 might find it difficult to see why this sudden rule change affected publication of the details of the successful appeal in that the appeal so clearly pre-dated the rule change.

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But, said Targett, such a view of events failed to take into account the QAA鈥檚 history. How could an organisation with such a proud record of low credibility and lack of transparency change course without being damned by its critics as alarmingly inconsistent?

(Rumours that the QAA may shortly be replaced by a witches鈥 coven have been firmly denied.)

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Come into the parlour

Microwaveable curry and rice

鈥淚t鈥檚 certainly not true at Poppleton!鈥

That was the vigorous response of Kirk Swavely, our Head of External Relations, to the claim by Patricia Walker, visiting research fellow at the University of East London, that many overseas academics felt uncomfortable in UK universities.

Mr Swavely said that he had noted Dr Walker鈥檚 claim in the Journal of Research in International Education that much of this discomfort stemmed from the feeling among foreign academics that their status was not properly recognised by home-based academics.

However, this was not a problem at Poppleton, where academic staff had been so undermined by management imperatives in recent years that they were now 鈥渋n considerable awe鈥 of the cleaners.

But Mr Swavely did agree that more could be done to make 鈥渙verseas dons鈥 welcome at Poppleton. And it was with this in mind that he had inaugurated a series of 鈥渨elcome foreigner dinners鈥, the first of which would be aimed primarily at dons from the Asian subcontinent.

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(NB If you are an Asian sub-continent don and would like to attend, please apply directly to Mr Swavely marking your application 鈥淐hicken Balti Evening鈥.)

Local election tsunami

In an election already replete with shock results comes the alarming news that one of our own dons, Mr Ted Odgers, the Smash the Bosses candidate for Poppleton West constituency, failed to gain a听single vote.

Commentators variously described the outcome as a 鈥渟eismic shift鈥, an 鈥渆xistential crisis鈥 and a 鈥渃omplete meltdown鈥. However, Mr Odgers, while admitting disappointment, blamed the outcome on the SNP, the failure of his party to be aspirational, the lack of dynamic leadership and his own 鈥渢actical error鈥 in nailing a list of his election pledges to the door of Poppleton West鈥檚 parish church.

Thought for the week

(Jennifer Doubleday is currently following in the footsteps of Tom Cruise and exfoliating with bird excrement. She will be back in business next week.)

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lolsoc@dircon.co.uk

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