糖心Vlog

The week in higher education - 4 December 2014

Published on
December 4, 2014
Last updated
May 22, 2015
  • For all the public assurances that the merger between University College London and the Institute of Education, University of London was a coming-together of equals, some IoE resistance fighters have always seen it as a takeover. That sense was only added to by an email sent to institute staff on November by Steve Denton, the IoE鈥檚 pro director for strategy and organisation. Mr Denton explained that, following the completion of the merger on 2 December, all staff should bring in their passports or work permits so that UCL could comply with its obligation 鈥渢o check the right to work of every IoE employee鈥. According to one IoE insider, this did not go down well, with one academic likening it to the takeover of K枚nigsberg by the Soviet Union at the end of the Second World War. As one entry to 糖心Vlog鈥檚 exam howlers competition in 2012 pointed out, Stalin鈥檚 motivation for such expansionist manoeuvrings was to establish a buffet zone in Eastern Europe 鈥 but it sounds as if, in this case, the commissars forgot to bring the sausage rolls.
  • If the prospect of being tutored by academic superstars such as Niall Ferguson and Steven Pinker doesn鈥檛 make you want to commit 拢18,000 a year to studying at the New College of the Humanities, would a spoof online video make you reconsider? The college believes that if you were a sixth-former, it just might. The Times reported on November that A. C. Grayling鈥檚 aspiring rival to Oxbridge has enlisted comedy video bloggers to play the parts of professors competing to deliver the best lecture in a spoof reality television programme. Whether the marketing strategy contributes to the tenfold increase in student enrolments the college apparently has its sights set on remains to be seen, but that goal was certainly unlikely to be furthered by Professor Grayling鈥檚 own attempt to get down with the kids at an event in 2012, where he likened the college鈥檚 superior student experience to 鈥減imping鈥 students鈥 鈥渞ide鈥.
  • It may have taken almost 100 years, but finally Universities UK has managed to elect a female president. Dame Julia Goodfellow, the University of Kent鈥檚 vice-chancellor, will succeed Sir Christopher Snowden, the University of Surrey鈥檚 vice-chancellor, on 1 August 2015 and will hold the post until July 2017. No female president has led the organisation since it was founded as the Committee of Vice-Chancellors and Principals of the Universities of the United Kingdom in 1918. But then it has probably only been relatively recently that members have actually had more than 10 female vice-chancellors in their ranks.
  • In October, Liam Byrne, the shadow universities minister, warned that vice-chancellors who attacked any Labour 拢6,000 fees policy would be on the 鈥渨rong side of public opinion鈥 and invite criticism of their high salaries. That threat has now been put to the test by his own namesake. Edward Byrne, the principal of King鈥檚 College London, told The Times on November that lowering fees to such a level without replacing the lost funding would 鈥渄estroy the system鈥. Professor Byrne, who joined King鈥檚 College from Australia鈥檚 Monash University in September, said that there was a danger of accepting 鈥渃hronic underfunding鈥 by taking money out without a plan B, and questioned the evidence that 拢6,000 fees would widen participation. Of course, Labour has yet to decide if such a policy will be in its manifesto, but Professor Byrne is now likely to be top of the party鈥檚 salary shame hit list, just after Myleene Klass.
  • James Watson, the controversial co-discoverer of the structure of DNA, is to once again break new ground: he will become the first living Nobel laureate to auction his medal. The Financial Times reported on 28 November that the octogenarian biologist hoped the publicity around the sale would help him to re-enter public life after being shunned over his suggestion that black people were less intelligent than other races. He also hoped that the money raised by the 1962 medal 鈥 which could exceed 拢2 million 鈥 will allow him to buy a painting by David Hockney: presumably something from the artist鈥檚 swimming pool oeuvre, featuring a big splash.

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