In its latest effort to put links with India back on an even keel, the federal government is providing most of the money to establish a new centre which will research relations between the two countries – and straddle the ...
More »Search Results for: Comment
Is whackademia bad for your health?
Overworked, overwrought and overrun by managerialism, Joseph Gora ponders the mental health of Australia’s academic workforce. The vexed issue of the casualisation of the academic workforce has been boiling away for many years. Now it seems things have come to ...
More »Knowledge production in Australia
There are some demonstrable truths about universities that old prejudices fail to recognise. If they did, there could be change for the good, writes Glenn Withers. Politicians and industry figures in the past have suggested that more competition and more ...
More »Kopp this: in defence of a radical graduate teacher program
The head of a US program designed to attract top graduates from a range of disciplines into teaching in disadvantaged schools has defended the Australian version of the program against strident criticism from teacher groups. Wendy Kopp, CEO of Teach ...
More »Lessons from the past
It's time for a comprehensive national strategy on international education, says Stephen Connelly. My first job as an English language teacher was in 1988 at a college in downtown Melbourne. Fresh out of a dip ed, I took the beginners’ ...
More »Checked mate 24
1956 --- Puzzle corner A television commentator during Wimbledon said that in men’s singles on grass, the server has such an advantage that if he’s down 15-40, he still has a 50 per cent chance of winning the game. Assuming ...
More »SCU, CSU quit merger talks
A coherent policy framework similar to that governing the health sector is necessary is Australia is to address rural and regional provision of higher education. Professor Paul Johnson, vice-chancellor of La Trobe University, recently told the AUCEA conference that there ...
More »Funding cut by another name
Skills reform could cost Victorian TAFEs more than $50 million over the next three and a half years, primarily because of a quiet move to monthly funding arrangements, according to a confidential email circulated among senior officials in the state’s ...
More »PPP becomes a little more compact
The federal government’s training commitments under its two recent compacts – the compact with young Australians announced in April, and this month’s compact with retrenched workers – have been quietly absorbed into the government’s pre-existing commitments under the Productivity Places ...
More »“Death toll” report challenged: DEEWR
The federal government has challenged recent Fairfax newspaper reports about international student deaths in Australia, claiming the figures quoted in the articles don’t tally with its own data. The 1 July reports in The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald, based on coronial ...
More »