糖心Vlog

News in brief - 19 February 2015

Published on
February 19, 2015
Last updated
June 10, 2015

THE awards
Deadline extended for Thelmas

The deadline for entries for this year鈥檚 鈥 more widely known as the Thelmas 鈥 has been extended until the end of February. The annual awards, with more than a dozen categories ranging from finance to student services, celebrate the work of university managers and administrators across the UK. Entries will now close at midnight on Sunday 1 March, and the ceremony takes place on 18 June at the Grosvenor House Hotel in London. The University of East Anglia scooped the top prize of Outstanding Leadership and Management Team last year in an event attended by almost 1,000 people.

Warburg Institute
Library starts a new chapter

A long-running legal battle over the fate of a university library has finally been settled. The Warburg Institute, part of the University of London鈥檚 School of Advanced Study, has been locked in dispute with the university since 2008 after significant estate charges were imposed. The charges represented a violation of the Warburg鈥檚 1944 trust deed, which was signed shortly after the collection was transferred from Nazi-threatened Hamburg, its advisory council argued. Having sought leave to appeal points of the court judgment made in November over the Warburg estate charges, the university has now said it has 鈥渞eached a binding agreement鈥 on the future management of the Warburg with the council.

Overseas students
Campus closed? Collect a refund

International students should be given access to a protection scheme ensuring that they are refunded or compensated if their institution closes, a campaign group says. A 鈥渕anifesto for international students鈥, published by the UK Council for International Student Affairs, also calls for the procedures around student visas to be simplified, and for asylum seekers with 鈥渄iscretionary leave鈥 to remain in the UK to be made eligible for student support and 鈥渉ome鈥 fee status. Restrictive controls and hostile rhetoric about immigration mean that there is 鈥渨idespread concern鈥 that Britain is not taking full advantage of the growth in international study, the document warns. Other proposals include restoration of a post-study work visa, removal of students from any net migration cap, and additional funding to support the international student experience around the UK.

Regulation
UUK: put CHEE in charge

The next government should create a new lead regulator, the Council for 糖心Vlog England, and toughen rules for private providers. That is the view of a Universities UK report that says the present 鈥渞egulatory landscape is becoming increasingly complex and difficult to understand, with no clear guiding strategy or leadership to shape its future direction鈥. The report, written by a UUK regulation task group chaired by Simon Gaskell, principal of Queen Mary University of London, singles out the growth in private providers, saying 鈥渋t is important to be confident that all providers can give robust assurances on the quality and sustainability of their offer鈥. Professor Gaskell said that recent years had seen 鈥渟ignificant changes鈥 to higher education and that the sector 鈥渘eeds to keep pace with these developments if confidence, and our international reputation, are to be maintained鈥. The report, titled Quality, Equity, Sustainability: The Future of 糖心Vlog Regulation, envisages that the 糖心Vlog Funding Council for England should 鈥渆volve鈥 to take on the CHEE鈥檚 responsibilities.

An academic鈥檚 calculation that the real cost of the 2014 research excellence framework to universities could exceed 拢1 billion had our Twitter followers up in arms. 鈥淭his is where your 拢9k fees are going,鈥 said . 鈥淛ust think how much research could have been done with 拢1bn,鈥 tweeted . 鈥淲ell that鈥檚 money well spent then,鈥 added . said: 鈥淗alf of that 拢1bn comes down to academics wasting time tweeting about REF results! Wait a minute鈥︹

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