Korean fathers pay high cost for education Korean fathers are being forced into lonely and work-addicted lives in an attempt to give their children an overseas education, according to a report in the Korea Times. Kim Seong-kon, a professor of ...
More »IT’s dreadful environmental toll
When the Australian Computer Society commissioned a survey of the carbon footprint of Australia’s IT users it found that about 1.5 per cent of all emissions could be traced back to computer use. It’s a figure comparable to the civil ...
More »Checked mate 5
UC offshores 50 jobs to India
The University of Canberra is to axe 50 administrative positions and send the jobs offshore to India in a bid to save $8 million over four years. Vice-chancellor Stephen Parker told Campus Review, on 13 February the university council gave ...
More »Stimulus struggles: government stumbles into the holes
The federal government says bonus payments under its stimulus package will now be available to all students following negotiations with the Greens. Treasurer Wayne Swan told Greens leader Senator Bob Brown that the package would include a “mechanism to ensure ...
More »Rethinking the first year of university?
If universities are to take student retention seriously, the first-year experience must change, says Vincent Tinto. Many universities in the US speak of the importance of increasing student retention. Indeed, quite a few invest substantial resources in programs designed to ...
More »Bradley review lacks vision
The Bradley review fails to provide a framework of a higher education system that nurtures excellence and promotes diversity while encouraging access and equity, says Frederick G Hilmer. Australian universities warmly welcomed the Rudd Government’s commitment to an education revolution ...
More »No-job apprentices: government dangles $155m in carrots
With apprentices losing their jobs as the economy declines, the federal government has stepped in with a $145.6 million package to encourage employers to take them on again. ‘Securing Apprenticeships’ offers employers and group training organisations incentives of up to ...
More »Welcome to Melbourne, but mind the mugger
The international arrivals hall at Melbourne airport last week was populated with people wearing red shirts and big smiles. Their job was to greet some of the 20,000 students expected to pass through its doors last week. The welcoming crew ...
More »New fellowship for senior indigenous researchers
Innovation minister Kim Carr last week announced the new fellowship for senior indigenous researchers would be available from next January, fulfilling a commitment he made last July. The fellowship will be available to indigenous Australian academics who obtained their PhDs ...
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