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Jennifer Oriel's blog

Ignite the Light on The Hill

 
In the leadership debate between Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Tony Abbott on Sunday night, the nation awaited a contest of ideas. There was a contest, but it was devoid of ideas. The contenders for our next Prime Ministerial seat have forgotten the characteristics that differentiate memorable leaders from the mediocre; great leaders are dedicated scholars and teachers of their citizens, while the mediocre simply manage policies. Gillard and Abbott are managing, just.
 

Make Warmth, Not War

Can we remember a time, any of us, when the value of a university education was described or measured in non-economic terms? The answer comes, most unexpectedly, from a couple of statisticians caught up in what must have been a terrifying decade for number crunchers; the 1960s. Make warmth, not war? Charles and Donivan thought so. And research published last week shows that they were onto something.  
 
Soon after the first ‘electrical computer’ (progeny of les funky beaded abaci) was set up in a room big enough to house a Boeing, blokes with thick-rimmed glasses started to measure everything in sight. Run for the hills! In the spirit of the day, they even tried to create a formula for ‘faculty warmth’.
 

The Australian Labor Party’s Opus Equity

Every generation seeks to rise above the circumstances of its birth. This week, the Australian Labor Government has given thousands of disadvantaged young people the opportunity to do so by prising open the doors of the country’s universities.

 

Towers of Babel

There is never an official apology for neglect of the mind.
 
‘Who knows what an academic is?’ In a class of forty Victorian Year 10 students, not one could answer the question. That silence is prelude to a new generation of university-community engagement. 
 

University Citizenship

Dare to ask the question: why does the university exist?

 

The British Government has failed to understand public curiosity about this question to its detriment. One blogger described British Labour's latest vision 'Higher Ambitions–the Future of Universities in a Knowledge Economy' thus, 'It's the university as shopping mall.' If greater student choice hasn’t heightened public satisfaction with education, is it because we want to choose like consumers, but be educated as citizens? 

 

There is a sparking debate in Australia’s higher education sector on the meaning of the university. It’s at once daring and necessary. The two kingpins are Steven Schwartz, the Vice-Chancellor of Macquarie University and Luke Slattery, Editor of the Higher Education Supplement in The Australian. Allow me to introduce Eleanor Roosevelt and Sally Walker.

 

Federal Partnerships and Participation Program

In the coming weeks, the Federal Government is expected to release national guidelines to assist in the development of university-low socioeconomic status (low SES) schools partnerships and increased enrolments of low SES students.

 

The Government’s laudable goal that by 2020, 20% of undergraduate enrolments will be students from low SES backgrounds is to be supported by a proposed Partnerships and Participation Program. The sector is eagerly awaiting the guidelines for the Program under which it will receive equity funding from 2010. As indicated in the budget report 'Transforming Australia's Higher Education System', there is $108 million available through the partnerships fund and $325 million for low SES enrolment loading over four years.

 

The core questions dogging the sector in relation to the new equity funding include:

 

Professor Elizabeth Blackburn, Nobel Laureate

Elizabeth Blackburn. Elizabeth Blackburn. Elizabeth Blackburn. They say if you repeat something thrice it might come true and it has; Professor Elizabeth Blackburn has become the first Australian woman to win a Nobel Prize. Like the luminescent fish who exist in the dark matter of the ocean and light the abyss, Elizabeth Blackburn, Nobel Laureate has put paid to 20th century nonsense about the human brain having a birthsex and the deduction arising from this faulty premise; that women do not belong in the sciences, or belong only by relative degree to men.

 

Master-Feeders in Australian Higher Education

The creation of a seamless tertiary education sector is the mission of the nascent Tertiary Education Quality Standards Agency (TEQSA). The emerging sector in Australia is likely to take one of two forms: a binary or triunary structure. The former would return us to the pre-Dawkins era and the latter would propel us towards a US style model of postsecondary education with research intensive universities at the head of an apex, followed by universities offering large undergraduate programs with a smattering of research degrees underpinned by community or technical colleges teaching the mass of students at the base.

 

At the end of 2008 as the Bradley Review was in full swing, a heated debate played out in The Australian newspaper on the topic of community colleges. Group of Eighters thought they should be introduced to Australia and the rest of the sector decided not to go gentle into that octad night.

 

Look to the Right, Look to the Left, Look to the Right Again

There is something amiss with both Left and Right-wing approaches to school education.

England’s Left, represented by Ed Balls, Secretary of State for Children School and Families has claimed victory in its 10 year battle to close the gap between students attending state and private schools on the basis that the number of schools where students are underperforming in exams has decreased.

 

Michael Gove, the Shadow Secretary, argues that the results have been inflated by Labour’s inclusion of dumbed down subjects such as basic literacy and numeracy in the General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE). Gove's policy recommends weighting subjects by intellectual rigour, excluding vocational qualifications or 'diplomas' from school league tables and teaching an academic curriculum until the age of 16, after which students could select vocational training as desired.

Neuroplasticity and the Education Evolution

In order to answer the grand questions of the 21st century, students may need to be taught in a way that develops their neuroplasticity as much as their intellectual and human capital.
 

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