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# university - Tuesday 24 August, 2010

A GROUP CHARGED with researching the costs of higher education in Ireland says that increased demand for third-level places requires a €500m funding boost per year.

The group, chaired by economist Dr Colin Hunt, says that the current funding level of higher education is unsustainable, according to the Irish Times.

Colleges are facing a 30% hike in student numbers, and an increase of 55,000 students is predicted within 10 years.

The Hunt report will be presented to cabinet shortly. It apparently rejects the bid being made by a number of ITs in Ireland for university designation, instead backing closer collaboration between universities and ITs.

The report also recommends that students contribute to the cost of their tuition fees, via a new student loan scheme.

It criticises the low number of places designated for mature students and part-time learners, and calls for greater flexibility in opportunities for education.

Other members of the group are: Brigid McManus, secretary general of the Department of Education; Michael Kelly, chairman of the Higher Education Authority; Dr John Hegarty, provost of Trinity College Dublin; and Paul Rellis, managing director of Microsoft Ireland

# university - Friday 20 August, 2010

THOUGH OVER 58,000 PEOPLE are still only getting to grips with their Leaving Cert results, there’s a chance that in the future there might be no such thing as a ‘points race’ – in fact, there may not even be such a thing as the Leaving Cert.

Havelock Academy in Grimsby, which only got its first set of A-level results yesterday, has decided it’s scrapping the British equivalent of Ireland’s Leaving Certificate in favour of the International Baccalaureate, or IB, believing that it is a better-suited award to give to people on the verge of college.

The school’s headmaster, Nick O’Sullivan, says the IB would “bring us a richness and flexibility which we can apply across the school at all levels.”

The IB system is governed by a spinoff of UNESCO, the United Nations’ educational and cultural organisation. Though based in Switzerland, and – as one might expect – reasonably well-rounded and neutral in its curricula.

It’s more typically used in schools with students from a global background, and who might intend to study elsewhere after their second-level tuition – such as in Brussels, where the children of European diplomats attend schools that award the IB.

It has a global admiring, too: Time magazine, discussing ways of bringing American schools into the new millennium, described it as “a rigorous, off-the-shelf curriculum recognised by universities around the world”. George W Bush had supported extending the number of schools offering the IB programme.

In the UK, meanwhile, the IB was championed by Tony Blair: his government gave funding so that every local authority in the country could allow at least one institution within their jurisdictions to offer it.

In Ireland, it doesn’t have quite so many admirers, but with the move to harmonise third-level qualifications across Europe – as part of the Bologna Process, which has 47 participating countries, including Ireland – gathering pace and slowly reaching fruition, it would be logical that the next step would be harmonisation of the second-level curriculum.

British students coming to colleges in Ireland are often stunned at how many subjects Irish students sit in the Leaving – while most Irish take seven subjects, with some sitting eight or nine, the average Briton takes three A-levels, or four if they’re pushing it.

In the US, meanwhile, many colleges measure entry requirements in an SAT score measured almost entirely on mathematics and English. In Germany, the Abitur is more similar to the Leaving Cert in terms of its breadth; in France, the bac likewise. Either way, the aims of Bologna – to harmonise higher education and thus make student mobility easier – are fundamentally hampered by the mish-mash of entry systems.

Thus, in the future, the second-level students of Europe may all find themselves sitting a standardised second-level syllabus, just as they currently find their third-level degrees being harmonised across the continent. The era of the Leaving Cert may be at an end quicker than we realise.

# university - Thursday 19 August, 2010

HARRY POTTER fans can truly immerse themselves in the stories of JK Rowling, by signing up to study the novels at university.

The course, entitled Harry Potter and the Age of Illusion, is offered by Durham University and promises to:

…place the phenomenon that is Harry Potteer in its social, cultural and educational context and understand some of the reasons for its popularity

The module is part of the undergraduate Education Studies programme, and has already seen about 70 undergraduates sign up for the course which will be available next year. The course aims to help students read the Harry Potter series in the context of the education system.

Some of the key areas of content that students will consider are:

  • Prejudice and intolerance in the classroom
  • Anarchy and rebellion
  • Bullying, friendship and solidarity
  • Courage, ingenuity and integrity
  • The concept of good citizenship

JK Rowling published the first Harry Potter book in 1997. Since then, the series has enjoyed phenomenal success; the seven-book series has sold over 400m copies worldwide.

And Durham would appear to be the perfect setting for studying Harry Potter as the town was used as a filming location for the first two films.

Durham Cathedral, near Durham University, was used for both the interior and exterior views of Hogwarts. The cathedral’s chapter house was also used for the scenes in McGonagall’s classroom.

And if that not authentic enough for die-hard fans, they can always sign up for some extra-curricular Harry Potter activities with the International Quidditch Association.

A NEW report has concluded that the higher education system is facing a funding crisis and recommends that a new student loan scheme be introduced.

The government-commissioned report by Dr Colin Hunt recommends that students “contribute to the cost of their education” by taking out student loans.

Under the recommendations of the report, students would be able to secure a loan to cover the cost of tuition fees in a similar manner to the student loan system in the UK.  Students would begin making repayments after graduation, once they have secured employment and had reached a particular pay threshold.

This would mean that new graduates would enter the workforce with significant debts. Currently, the state covers the costs of tuition in Ireland.

There will an expected increase of 30% in student numbers over the next ten years.

Minter for Education Mary Coughlan has ruled out an increase in the student registration charge this year, which now stands at €1,500. However, it is possible that this charge could increase in 2011.

Other recommendations in the Hunt report:

  • The country’s 14 institutes of technology could changed into technology universities – subject to strict quality assurances
  • Part-time and full-time students would have the same entitlements, meaning that both would be eligible for maintenance grants and not obliged to pay fees
  • A new workload management system would be introduced and closely monitored in both universities and institutes of technology
  • Closer collaboration is recommended between centres of eduction to help create “clusters’’ of excellence
  • An expanded role be considered for the Higher Education Authority in managing the sector and linking spending to national objectives

Yesterday 8,000 students received their Leaving Certificate exam results.

# university - Thursday 12 August, 2010

“CONFUSIONISM” is the ancient Chinese system of philosophical teaching and Galileo discovered AIDS – at least that’s what some third-level students wrote in their exams.

The Times Higher Education Supplement (THE) has published its annual list of exam howlers and it makes for interesting reading.

The competition asks academics to send in their favourite exam cock-ups.

One student in the University of Dundee said “Vagina Henderson” was one of the first modern nurses in the 20th century – the woman’s name was actually Virginia.

A journalism student wrote a piece on “complimentary” medicine, rather than complementary medicine. Her lecturer saw the bright side, however, saying: “I quite liked the idea of picking up a pill and it saying nice things to you to make you feel better.

She also appreciated a fashion article that described the subject’s sense of style as very “sheikh”.

Another student said Polari – a coded language spoke by gay men to disguise their sexuality – was an ancient language of the Inuit, while another wrote about “anus” crime, before the lecturer realised they had meant “heinous” crime.

Finally, one student of Warwick Business School signed an email off with the line “I am sorry if this caused you any incontinence” – oops!