Tag Archives: Academics

Texas regions battle for new public universities

Dallas Morning News: Texas regions battle for new public universities

AUSTIN – The tug of war for new Texas universities has begun.

In back-to-back hearings this week, North Texas lawmakers lobbied for new public law and pharmacy schools in Dallas, affordable educations largely absent in the region.

They face stiff competition from South Texas lawmakers vying for a medical school and their own law school. While the Rio Grande Valley has fewer higher-education options, Dallas’ proposed schools have lower price tags – a major selling point in a tight budget year.

How does architecture affect academic study?

The Independent: How does architecture affect academic study?

Can architecture promote intellectual excellence? On a cramped site in Oxford, in the university’s new biochemistry building designed by Hawkins\Brown, even eminent boffins can’t resist putting a new spin on Le Corbusier’s modernist declaration that buildings should be “machines for living in”. The head of biochemistry, Professor Kim Nasmyth, says: “Actually, this building is an interaction machine.”

University standards being ‘dumbed down’, claim academics

Telegraph: University standards being ‘dumbed down’, claim academics

University students are being given good marks despite failing to understand “intellectual ideas” and writing essays text message-style, according to academics.

Lecturers claim they are being encouraged to turn a blind eye to poor standards as universities compete to increase student numbers.

One told how some students believed they “should not do any work” because they paid £3,000 a year in fees.

Another said undergraduates were being allowed to pass courses with fewer than a quarter of the marks needed because institutions could not afford to let them drop out.

A College Ends Poli Sci

Inside Higher Ed: A College Ends Poli Sci

Wisconsin Lutheran College last week not only eliminated the jobs of 18 people — it also ended the teaching of political science.

Many colleges are being forced this year to eliminate positions, but Wisconsin Lutheran’s move illustrates a reality for many small institutions: It may be impossible to meet their goals for eliminating slots without also eliminating disciplines.

CFP: Academic Labor and Law (Special Section of Workplace: A Journal for Academic Labor)

CFP: Academic Labor and Law
Special Section of Workplace: A Journal for Academic Labor

Guest Editor: Jennifer Wingard, University of Houston

The historical connections between legislation, the courts, and the academy have been complex and multi-layered. This has been evident from early federal economic policies, such as the Morell Act and the GI Bill, through national and state legislation that protected student and faculty rights, such as the First Amendment and affirmative action clauses. These connections continue into our current moment of state and national efforts to define the work of the university, such as The Academic Bill of Rights and court cases regarding distance learning. The question, then, becomes whether and to what extent the impact of legislation and litigation reveals or masks the shifting mission of the academy. Have these shifts been primarily economic, with scarcities of funding leading many to want to legislate what is considered a university education, how it should be financed, and who should benefit from it? Are the shifts primarily ideological, with political interests working to change access, funding, and the intellectual project of higher education? Or are the shifts a combination of both political and economic influences? One thing does become clear from these discussions: at their core, the legal battles surrounding higher education are about the changing nature of the university –the use of managerial/corporate language; the desire to professionalize students rather than liberally educate them; the need to create transparent structures of evaluation for both students and faculty; and the attempt to define the types of knowledge produced and disseminated in the classroom. These are changes for which faculty, students, administrators, as well as citizens who feel they have a stake in higher education, seek legal redress. This special section of Workplace aims to explore the ways in which legislation and court cases impact the work of students, professors, contingent faculty, and graduate students in the university. Potential topics include but are not limited to:

  • Academic Freedom for students and/or faculty
    • Horowitz’s Academic Bill of Rights
    • Missouri’s Emily Booker Intellectual Diversity Act
    • First Amendment court cases concerning faculty and student’s rights to freely express themselves in the classroom and on campuses
    • Facebook/Myspace/Blog court cases
    • Current legislative and budgetary “attacks” on area studies (i.e. Queer Studies in Georgia, Women’s Studies in Florida)
  • Affirmative Action
    • The implementation of state and university diversity initiatives in the 1970s
    • The current repeal of affirmative action law across the country
  • Benefits, including Health Benefits, Domestic Partner Benefits
    • How universities in states with same-sex marriage bans deal with domestic partner benefits
  • Collective Bargaining
    • The recent rulings at NYU and Brown about the status of graduate students as employees
    • State anti-unionization measures and how they impact contingent faculty
  • Copyright/Intellectual Property
    • In Distance Learning
    • In corporate sponsored science research
    • In government sponsored research
  • Disability Rights and Higher Education
    • How the ADA impacts the university
  • Sexual Harassment and Consensual Relationships
    • How diversity laws and sexual harassment policies impact the university
  • Tenure
    • The Bennington Case
    • Post 9/11 court cases

Contributions for Workplace should be 4000-6000 words in length and should conform to MLA style. If interested, please send an abstract via word attachment to Jennifer Wingard (jwingard@central.uh.edu) by Friday, May 22, 2009. Completed essays will be due via email by Monday, August 24, 2009.

U Toledo considering deal with for-profit to deliver grad courses

Inside Higher Ed: Private Conversations

Tension is mounting at the University of Toledo, where administrators are exploring a partnership with a private company known for churning out quick and inexpensive degrees.

Toledo officials are considering a deal with Higher Ed Holdings, a Texas-based company that would help deliver online masters-level education courses to students in exchange for a share of tuition revenues. The company, founded by Dallas entrepreneur Randy Best, already has a similar arrangement with Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas.

Iowa Professors Mobilize Against Measure on Teaching Alternatives to Evolution

The Chronicle: Iowa Professors Mobilize Against Measure on Teaching Alternatives to Evolution

More than 200 faculty members at 20 Iowa colleges have signed a statement opposing a proposed state law that would give instructors at public colleges and schools a legal right to teach alternatives to evolution.

Student Expectations Seen as Causing Grade Disputes

The New York Times: Student Expectations Seen as Causing Grade Disputes

A recent study by researchers at the University of California, Irvine, found that a third of students surveyed said that they expected B’s just for attending lectures, and 40 percent said they deserved a B for completing the required reading.

National science group boycotting Louisiana in protest of anti-evolution law

Times-Picayune: National science group boycotting Louisiana in protest of Science Education Act

BATON ROUGE — A national organization of scientists has informed Gov. Bobby Jindal it will not hold its annual convention in Louisiana as long as the recently adopted Science Education Act remains on the books.

Arizona: ASU will close dozens of programs, cap enrollment

Arizona Republic: ASU will close dozens of programs, cap enrollment

Arizona State University President Michael Crow today said the school will cap enrollment and close applications to next year’s freshman class March 1, possibly ask for more tuition from next fall’s students, close about four dozen academic programs and significantly scale back operations at its Polytechnic and West campuses, all in response to state budget reductions.

No shit: how I lost my one-of-a-kind collection and my girlfriend, too

Times Higher Education Supplement: No shit: how I lost my one-of-a-kind collection and my girlfriend, too

For his PhD, Daniel Bennett had built a unique set of faecal samples from a rare lizard. When it was destroyed, he really hit bottom

To some people it might have been just a bag of lizard shit, but to me it represented seven years of painstaking work searching the rainforest with a team of reformed poachers to find the faeces of one of the world’s largest, rarest and most mysterious lizards. I didn’t realise just how much my bag of lizard shit meant to me until it was “accidentally” incinerated at the University of Leeds early in the third year of my PhD.

One Man’s Worthless Bag of Dung Is Another’s Priceless Research

The Chronicle News Blog: One Man’s Worthless Bag of Dung Is Another’s Priceless Research

Daniel Bennett has vowed to sue Britain’s University of Leeds for incinerating 77 pounds of feces he collected from the rare butaan lizard during seven years of doctoral research in the rain forests of the Philippines.

Prof fired for giving all A+s

Globe and Mail: Professor makes his mark, but it costs him his job

OTTAWA — On the first day of his fourth-year physics class, University of Ottawa professor Denis Rancourt announced to his students that he had already decided their marks: Everybody was getting an A+.

Museums and Academic Values

Inside Higher Ed: Museums and Academic Values

Arts advocates have been outraged this week by Brandeis University’s plan to sell all of the art in its museum as a way to raise money for the university. It turns out Brandeis isn’t the only university where critics are questioning the university’s commitment to important values for academic museums — although many may be relieved to know this other controversy does not involve a university selling off a collection. (Update on Brandeis: Its president on Wednesday indicated he might go along with keeping some of the art, but was committed to shutting the museum.)