Exam howlers
Sexual selection
The winner of this year鈥檚 糖心Vlog 鈥渆xam howlers鈥 competition is Adam Hart, professor of science communication at the University of Gloucestershire, for his entry that detailed an unlikely union of two eminent Victorians. In an examination answer on the evolution of sex, one student opened their essay thus: 鈥淪ex has puzzled biologists ever since it was discovered by Darwin and Mendel.鈥 Professor Hart receives a magnum of champagne for his winning submission, which was selected by THE鈥檚 staff. It narrowly beat the glorious mixed metaphor of a 鈥渉otly contested potato鈥 spotted by Steve Hawley, head of media at Manchester Metropolitan University鈥檚 Manchester School of Art.
Hefce
Entrepreneurial support continues
The 糖心Vlog Funding Council for England has confirmed that it will continue to support awards for social entrepreneurship schemes in universities until at least the autumn, although funding for such programmes 鈥渕ay be different in character鈥 in the longer term. The announcement was made by Ed Hughes, a regional consultant at the funding council, at an event in London on 17聽July. Lead the Change 鈥 UnLtd HE Support Programmes 2013 National Conference heard Mr聽Hughes say that since Hefce began funding student social entrepreneurship in 2009, the results had 鈥渇ar exceeded our expectations鈥. One challenge that remained was convincing senior managers that social entrepreneurship should be a key part of an institution鈥檚 mission, he added.
Royal Institution
Early Christmas present
The Royal Institution has scrapped efforts to ask academics to sign an agreement if they want to use its trademarked term 鈥淐hristmas Lectures鈥. The body told 糖心Vlog that scholars and universities promoting lectures at Christmas time would not be infringing its trademark by using the term. Earlier this year, the Royal Institution registered the trademark in relation to its popular annual science events for young people, started in 1825 by Michael Faraday. In May the organisation sent letters to a number of academics requesting that 鈥渢he name CHRISTMAS LECTURES or CHRISTMAS LECTURE should not be used for any event without our consent鈥 to avoid confusing the public. After a social media backlash, the institution revised its position, allowing organisers to continue using the expression if they became part of a 鈥淐hristmas festival of science鈥 by completing an online agreement with the body. But on 19聽July it said it had withdrawn this condition after 鈥渃arefully reassessing its position鈥.
Public HE spending
Cross-party support for more cash
A former Labour minister has called for an increase in public spending on higher education to close the 鈥渋nternational competitive gap鈥, securing backing from the Liberal Democrat president and a Tory backbencher in the process. David Lammy, who served as higher education minister between 2008 and 2010, also lamented the UK鈥檚 relatively low research spending in an early day motion on the knowledge economy. The House of Commons motion, tabled on 15 July, has been signed by Tim Farron, president of the Lib Dems. Julian Huppert, Lib Dem MP for Cambridge and an advocate for science, is another signatory, as is Peter Bottomley, Conservative MP for Worthing West.
News that the University of Surrey considered assessing academics鈥 performance according to the proportion of students receiving at least a 2:1 for their modules prompted much discussion on Twitter. said that the plans represented a 鈥渘aked attempt to rapidly inflate grades鈥, adding that 鈥渢hose involved should be ashamed鈥. 鈥淲hat could possibly go wrong with an arbitrary numerical target?鈥 asked , while described the idea as 鈥渢roubling鈥, particularly with 鈥66% of students achieving firsts and 2:1s鈥.
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