糖心Vlog

News in brief - 31 October 2013

Published on
October 31, 2013
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Israel
Branch of peace

A US university is planning to open a branch campus in the Arab capital of Israel in a bid to bring Arabs and Jews together and to expand its overseas presence. John Sharp, chancellor of the Texas A&M University System, announced that the 鈥減eace university鈥 would be located in Nazareth, Israel鈥檚 largest Arab city, the site having been chosen after consultation with Shimon Peres, Israel鈥檚 president. 鈥淗e wanted鈥 university that would be composed of students from diverse backgrounds in Israel 鈥 Arabs and Jews in the same classroom, professors, teachers the same way,鈥 Mr聽Sharp said.聽Mr Peres is a vocal advocate of coexistence between Israel鈥檚 Jewish majority and its Arab minority, The Washington Post reported. Mr Sharp said that to build the university, the Israeli parliament would need to pass special legislation, which could take a year.

United States
In need of aid? You can wait

A US university has been accused of favouring well-off students in its admissions policy. According to an article in George Washington University鈥檚 student newspaper, The GW Hatchet, the institution has been putting lower-income applicants on a waiting list during the second round of admissions, and university officials have for years misrepresented the policy. Previously, university officials have said that the university was 鈥渘eed-blind鈥. However in the Hatchet article last week, Laurie Koehler, senior associate provost for enrolment management, called the institution鈥檚 admissions policy 鈥渘eed-aware鈥, meaning that 鈥渟tudents who meet GW鈥檚 admissions standards, but are not among the top applicants, can shift from 鈥榓dmitted鈥 to 鈥榳aitlisted鈥 if they need more financial support from GW鈥. In a statement reacting to the article, Ms Koehler said it was 鈥渋mportant to note that consideration of need occurs at the very end of the admissions process鈥.

India
To be honest, I have to leave

A university head has resigned from his institution with a parting shot that has sent ripples through India鈥檚 academy. Souvik Bhattacharyya, who was vice-chancellor of Jadavpur University, said he was leaving because he 鈥渇aced difficulties while pursuing certain values such as honesty, integrity and ethics on many occasions鈥. Professor Bhattacharyya, who is returning to the Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur 鈥 which he left to join Jadavpur 鈥 cited 鈥減ersonal and professional鈥 reasons in his resignation letter, The Times of India reported, but it was claimed that his tenure had been blighted by run-ins with the government. 鈥淚聽had come to this university with a lot of hope and dreams,鈥 Professor Bhattacharyya said. 鈥淚 tried to do something, but much of it will remain unfulfilled. JU has immense potential鈥ut it can do much better. I聽needed to take some action that I聽couldn鈥檛.鈥

Australia
Ignoble delay

A Nobel laureate has condemned bureaucratic delays in the announcement of the winners of an Australian research funding stream. Brian Schmidt, an astronomer at the Australian National University and joint winner of the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics, said he was 鈥渄isgusted鈥 by the wait to learn who had received Future Fellowships from the Australian Research Council. The decision, he claimed, meant that researchers had to spend weeks applying for next year鈥檚 round because they did not know if they had won a 2013 fellowship. 鈥淧eople are pretty disgusted by the way we do business here, and so am聽I,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t really comes down to the non-strategic way we treat science policy in this country.鈥 The delay stems from Labor鈥檚 鈥減ause鈥 on research grants last year and from the demand by Tony Abbott鈥檚 new coalition government that all discretionary grants be approved by the finance ministry, The Australian reported.

Spain
La lucha continua

Spanish university students carried out a three-day strike last week in protest against cuts in the state education system and a requirement that pupils choose at a younger age to pursue either an academic or a vocational path (an attempt to reduce the youth unemployment rate). Protesters also condemned the rise in study costs at Spain鈥檚 universities, according to the Chinese news agency Xinhua. The students insisted that the changes to costs of courses and to grants mean 鈥渕any people cannot have higher education鈥.

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