Investment in academic teaching
Graduate quality at stake
The future quality of graduates is under threat from underinvestment in teaching, according to a study. The report, Improving the Status and Valuation of Teaching in the Careers of UK Academics, was launched at the Physiological Society鈥檚 annual conference on 30 June and calls for an urgent change in culture in terms of the value and status of teaching academics. Detailed in the study 鈥 published by the Academy of Medical Sciences, the Physiological Society, the Society of Biology and the Heads of University Biosciences 鈥 are the results of a workshop held in March and a survey of more than 250 bioscience and medical academics. These identify a number of steps that could be taken to improve the situation, including developing an excellence framework similar to the one that exists for research.
Technology start-ups
Incubator ranked European No 1
A UK university business incubator has been voted the best in Europe. An international ranking placed the SETsquared incubator, a collaboration between the universities of Bath, Bristol, Exeter, Southampton and Surrey, as second in the world, behind one at Rice University in Houston. SETsquared works to expand technology start-up companies in centres based at each of the institutions. It has worked with more than 1,000 early stage companies and helped to raise more than 拢1 billion of investment in 11 years. Dhruv Bhatli, co-founder and director of research at the University Business Incubator Index, said: 鈥淚t is an outstanding business incubator that provides exceptional quality to its client companies and produces growth companies and high economic impact.鈥
Teaching for exams
A levels? Forgotten long ago
Students have forgotten more than half of what they learned in their A levels by their first week of university, a study says. Researchers at the University of East Anglia tested nearly 600 A-grade biology students at five universities in their first week of term to see what they could remember from their A-level course. According to lead researcher Harriet Jones, from UEA鈥檚 School of Biological Sciences, students had 鈥渇orgotten around 60 per cent of everything they learned for their A levels鈥. 鈥淭his is undoubtedly a problem caused by secondary schools gearing all their teaching towards students doing well in exams, in order to achieve league table success,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut cramming facts for an exam doesn鈥檛 give students a lasting knowledge of their subject.鈥 The results of the study have been published in the Journal of Biological Education.
Labour science policy
There could be certainty ahead
Labour is proposing a long-term plan for research funding to help create high-wage jobs, ending the 鈥渦ncertainty鈥 in science policy created by the coalition. That was the position set out by Liam Byrne, shadow minister for universities, science and skills, in a Green Paper inviting views on Labour鈥檚 science policy, published last week. The paper, which sets out four areas where 鈥渃hange is needed鈥, also says universities 鈥渕ust play a major role in the UK鈥檚 national system of innovation鈥. Science policy can also help to tackle a 鈥渃ost of living crisis鈥, says the paper, titled One Nation: Labour鈥檚 Plan for Science. Mr Byrne notes that 鈥渄eveloped countries compete in high-value markets on quality, underpinned by well-paid and skilled workers, and [by] growing high value-added industries that require innovation and a highly skilled workforce鈥.
News that Glyndwr University and 57 private colleges have had their licences to sponsor overseas students suspended, while the universities of Bedfordshire and West London have also been prevented from taking any new international students pending further investigations, set tongues wagging among our Twitter followers. accused the 糖心Vlog Office of 鈥渞idiculous draconian actions鈥, while said the news was 鈥渁 serious drawback for the reputation of international education鈥. said she felt 鈥渧ery sorry for both current & prospective students of the three unis affected by latest [UK Visas and Immigration] visa restrictions鈥.
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