University-Business Forum - Berlin, 20/21 November 2014
Video impressions by Tino Brömme, Enrico Masi and Keith Herrmann
Conference Programme | ENGLISH | GERMAN | ITALIAN version
Arm wrestling between Google and Spain over copyright fees
(worldbulletin) -- Google said it plans to close its news-linking service in Spain in
response to legislation under which publishers will soon be able to force Internet sites to pay for re-publishing headlines or snippets of news.The move also means readers in Latin America and around the globe will no longer find links to articles from any Spanish news publishers on Google News ... read more 11.12.2014
Christmas present for federal science policy in Germany
BERLIN (zeit) -- The legal barrier for the federal government to invest and intervene directly in German universities is expected to fall tomorrow. Austerity and tax reduction have convinced the federal states that central control over this expensive sector is better ... read more 17.12.2014
Romanian PM gives up his PhD 2½ years later
BUCAREST (romania insider) -- Romanian Prime Minister Victor Ponta announced that he
will give up his PhD in Law, two and a half years after being accused of having copied half of his doctoral thesis, without quoting the sources ... read more 16.12.2014
Putin divides and enrages scientists
MOSCOW (nature) -- “Do you have a vision for the future of science in this country?” — “Will we have a say?” Russian scientists ask education minister Andrei Fursenko. Instead of an answer, science policy is being decided behind closed doors ... read more 16.12.2014
UK government paving the way for university mergers?
LONDON (the) -- Is the British government encouraging more universities to merge? With the research excellence framework results coming up soon, former university minister David Willetts has suggested that research bodies should “ease up” on promoting competition in favour of encouraging collaboration between disciplines and institutions ... read more 11.12.2014
Time for universities to stand up against Big Oil
CAMBRIDGE, USA (switchboard) -- A group of Harvard students recently filed suit against the college’s president, fellows, and others, for “mismanagement of charitable funds.” The suit asks the court to compel the university —which boasts a $36 billion endowment, the largest of any university in the world— to divest from fossil fuels ... read more 03.12.2014
Universities ‘in ruins’ see thousands protest in France
PARIS (rt) -- Thousands of French university staff and students have marched to protest low education budgets and universities’ facilities that are “literally in ruins”. Budget amendments for 2015, approved by the National Assembly in November, reduce education by €136 million, including €70 million of higher education ... read more 12.12.2014
Half of UK university teachers on zero-hour contracts
LONDON (lff) -- Half of universities and 63 percent of FE colleges in the UK use zero-hours contracts, often in large numbers, a research of the college union UCU shows. They are twice as likely to use these kind of contracts with no guarantee of work than other workplaces ... read more 16.12.2014
More academics in Germany unemployed
BERLIN (bild) -- National statistics count 2.2 million standing in the dole queue in Germany. 209,000 of the unemployed have a higher education degree, nearly three percent more than last year ... read more 15.12.2014
Slovenian universities at the brink of bankrupcy
LJUBLJANA (sta) -- Slovenian universities are in a critical situation due to inadequate funding, Ivan Svetlik, rector of the Univesity of Ljubljana, has warned. Most of the budget goes to salaries and current costs with nothing left for development. The Ljubljana Faculty of Social Sciences is threatened by illiquidity ... read more 10.12.2014
Citations for sale
BERKELEY (dc) -- What a surprise — reputation can be bought with money! Q.e.d. in this year’s U.S. News and World Report rankings. The little-known King Abdulaziz University (KAU) in Saudi Arabia ranked seventh in the world in mathematics — despite the fact that it didn’t have a doctorate program in math until two years ago ... read more 05.12.2014
Increasing recognition of foreign qualifications in Germany
BERLIN (bmbf) -- More and more foreign qualifications are being recognised in Germany. Statistics for 2012/2013 show an acceptance rate of nearly 80 percent, most of them in the medical sector. The majority of applicants come from Poland, Romania and Russia ... read more 15.12.2014
EU invests €410 million in a network for raw materials
BERLIN (ki) -- The European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT) has commissioned an international consortium to build a Knowledge and Innovation Community in the sector of raw materials. 116 European universities, research centers and companies from 22 countries are participating with a budget of €410 million in the coming seven years ... read more 11.12.2014
Mexican protester crashes Nobel Peace Prize ceremony
OSLO (ketv) -- A flag waving Mexican protester crashed the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony as he rushed the stage begging the winner to bring attention to Mexico. Since September Mexico has been the topic of worldwide attention when a group of police officers, acting under orders of a town mayor, kidnapped a group of 43 students ... read more 10.12.2014
Madrid wants more police control over universities
MADRID (ccinf) -- Cristina Cifuentes, member of the conservative People’s Party and delegate of the City of Madrid, has proposed allowing police forces to access university campuses even before —as it is now the rule— a rector’s explicit request. Students and trade unions have denounced this as “preventive criminalisation” ... read more 15.12.2014
Netherlands: Student debt threatens prosperity
THE HAGUE (scienceguide) -- Student debts are a threat to the Dutch economy. The country report for the Netherlands of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) shows how household debts such as student loans damage society on the short and on the long run. They diminish consumption, discourage young people from investing and from being entrepreneurs and hamper their social and economic activity in general ... read more 11.12.2014
Lithuanian universities to be allowed to rent property
VILNIUS (baltic course) -- A law amendment allows Lithuanian universities to rent immovable property. This liberty is limited to cultural and educational purposes ... read more 10.12.2014Turkey to open mosques ‘in every university’

ISIS takeover in Iraq’s higher education
MOSUL (ibtimes) -- Six months since the Islamic State group shut down one of the Middle East’s biggest research and education centers, there's still no sign of relief in Iraq’s second-largest city. At the University of Mosul, in northern Iraq, classes remain cancelled and thousands of its students have left the area for nearby Kurdistan ... read more 02.12.2014
Estonia: steep fall in R&D expenditure
TALLINN (baltic course) -- The ratio of expenditure in research and development to the GDP in Estonia declined from 2.16 percent in 2012 to 1.74 percent in 2013. This was the biggest drop —19 percent— among the EU member states ... read more 03.12.2014
France counts on foreign students

Anti-TTIP petition draws one million signatures
BRUSSELS (dw) -- An online petition criticising the ongoing trade negotiations between the European Union and the United States surpassed one million signatures on Thursday. TTIP, but also CETA (free trade EU-Canada) and TiSA (50 countries on services only) would cause serious damage to education, the opponents fear ... read more 04.12.2014
Universities self-righteous and mediocre
BERLIN (spiegel) -- The philosopher Armen Avanessian from Berlin has written a book of reckoning on German universities. They are, he says, self-referential, reactionary, progress-resistant, anti-intellectual career factories adverse to change and real critical thinking ... read more 05.12.2014
Global brands dominate employability ranking
LONDON (the) -- In the Global Employability University Survey 2014, ‘global’ UK and US institutions are making the top 150 of the list; universities that are mainly regional players, tend to fare less well ... read more 08.12.2014
Recognition trouble of Czech and Slovak diplomas
PRAGUE (parl) -- Slovak degrees will be recognised at Czech universities and vice-versa, so will for school and high school diplomas. The Czech Parliament has ratified the decision today following several postponements. A controversial issue remains that no list of the recognised university degrees and of full and associate professors has been produced ... read more 11.12.2014
Greek minister sells out higher education
ATHENS (uwn) -- An amendment proposed by Education Secretary Andreas Loverdos would open Greek higher education for foreign private education providers. The change of the Constitution is intended to allow American colleges to operate in Greece without complicated franchise agreements. It is widely believed that this is the culmination of pressure on Loverdos and his predecessor by the American embassy which has a long history of intervention in Greek politics … read more 05.12.14
Austrian universities build academic community cloud

LINZ (standard) -- The universities of Linz, Salzburg and Innbruck have joined forces to build a academic cloud community, a connected IT system to make services like storage, servers, certain software etc. decentrally available. Further plans include a virtual marketplace for educational IT solutions ... read more 11.12.2014
Thousands of ‘fake’ students at UK’s private colleges
LONDON (guardian) -- The government was hoping “alternative providers” would lead ground-breaking market reforms in the higher education sector. Instead, thousands of state subsised students drop out ... read more 02.12.14
Paris-Saclay wants to compete with Harvard
PARIS (bbc) -- The French government is bringing together 19 institutions into a single structure and an initial funding of 7.5 billion euros for an endowment, buildings and transport links. The aim is a university of a size and scale that can compete with global giants like Harvard or the MIT ... read more 10.12.14
Irish universities accredit Indian e-learning provider
DUBLIN (independent) -- Senior officials of India’s biggest company Tata met with Irish government heads to seal the deal. Tata intends to sell online education courses based on Irish universities’ curriculum into the lucrative US market, where the concept is most advanced but a lead provider has not yet emerged. Ireland’s universities have been prepared for major commercial deals like this by years of austerity ... read more 301114
For a better European Research Area policy
BRUSSELS (euractiv) -- The European Research Area (ERA) policy is now undergoing a review, which will culminate in the adoption of an ‘ERA Roadmap’ in mid-2015. This is the right moment at which to re-think ERA policy, Miguel Seabra, president of Science Europe, argues in a recent opinion piece. It needs to refocus “on better targeted priorities, rather than spreading it thinly over a large number of ‘priorities’, and to make ERA about discussing real bottlenecks”, Seabra writes ... read more 08.12.2014
What has the EU ever done for education in the poorest part of Britain? Quite a lot, actually
CORNWALL (independent) -- “The EU contributed hugely towards the development of universities in Cornwall,” one of Europes poorest regeions. “In turn, this has generated approximately £500m of income for the Cornish economy in the past 10 years,” says Roger Auster, president of the student union FXU ... read more 03.12.2014
Santander Bank invests $1 billion in universities

New law on intellectual property in Spain
MADRID (el economista) -- Spanish universities will have to pay 7 million euros per year to the authors of works that they publish on their virtual platforms. The new law on intellectual property will enter into force in January 2015. An average Spanish university with 15.000 students will have to pay around 90.000 euros ... read more 03.12.2014
Macmillan’s ‘free access’ is far from open
LONDON (the conversation) -- Earlier this week the publisher Macmillan announced that subscribers to 49 of its Nature journals would be able to share links to the full text of articles. But the material is not available for anyone, nor is the archive material openly licensed ... read more 09.12.2014
Tits for science
MILAN (mirror) -- Selfies aren’t always selfish, some are used for a good cause. Such as Italian women showing their boobs alongside a scientific message in a new campaign that now has almost 19,000 likes on Facebook. The web marketer Lara Tait, who started the blog “tette per la scienza”, instists that every message has been verified and can be controlled with an additional link ... read more | video 29.11.2014
France forges scientific cooperation with Kazakhstan
BISHKEK (div) -- Rectors of some two dozen French universities were part of François Hollande’s delegation in Kazakhstan. On a joint university forum, the education ministries of both countries signed an agreement in the field of university cooperation, science and vocational training, as well as the mutual recognition of diplomas and university degrees ... read more 08.12.2014
Universities must be less prestige-oriented
ZURICH (der bund) -- Too many PhDs can hamper economic growth, recent studies show. A doctoral degree does not always lead to higher income, compared to a Masters, only in sciences and medicine it does. In social sciences and humanities its economic advantage is doubtable. In rich countries it is a kind of luxury good, people do it because they can afford it, not necessarily because they need it. For many universities it is partly nothing more than cheap scientific labour ... read more 08.12.2014
The lack of professorships leaves many 40 year old graduates with a PhD unemployed and unfit for the labour market. Universities should therefore, Swiss experts argue, stop being so prestige-oriented ... read more 04.12.2014
Telefonica engages in transatlantic university cooperation
MADRID (el dario) -- For the first time, the Spanish telecommunications company Telefonica has signed an agreement with a Latin American university. In cooperation with the University of Sao Paolo and the University of Madrid projects for intelligent cities are planned ... read more 04.12.2014
Swiss call for part-time Master’s
BERN (24 heures) -- Mauro Dell’Ambrogio, Swiss state secretary for education and research, has proposed the introduction of part-time Master degrees. Students with a Bachelor’s degree should be obliged to have worked in their field before being admitted to further studies, he said. His idea has been the subject of heated debate ... read more 30.11.2014
Crowd funded research at Italian university
PAVIA (prima pagina news) -- The University of Pavia has announced Universitiamo, a new crowd funding initiative for research projects. Pavia is the first Italian university to embrace this approach, which allows anyone to contribute to scientific research … read more 04.12.2014
UK: Universities harassed by ‘anti-terror’ policies
LONDON (guardian) -- Universities are one of Britain’s top export earners, yet they are being undermined and harassed by the excessive “anti-terror” monitoring requirements and by routine refusal to grant visas, in the name of an immigration control policy that is clearly driven by populist anti-foreigner hysteria and now the rise of Ukip ... read more 08.12.2014What’s a university to do about climate change?
BERKELEY (l.a.times) -- The movement to force university endowments to divest their holdings in fossil fuel companies —coal, oil and gas— has some obvious shortcomings. That’s why UC Berkeley energy expert Severin Borenstein proposed a new, broader, approach. His idea is for every campus to impose a carbon tax on itself ... read more 08.12.2014
German students attracted to Austria
VIENNA (oön) -- Most of the foreign students in Austria are German (followed by the Dutch). 32.000 came in 2012/13, almost 25 percent. Most of them study law, economics and social sciences ... read more 06.12.2014
Hackers from Iran allegedly attacked universities
INTERNATIONAL (reuters) -- Also universities have been among the targets of hackers from Iran, a US company claims. Aerospace firms, airports and airlines, universities, energy firms, hospitals, and telecommunications operators based in the United States, Israel, China, Saudi Arabia, India, Germany, France, England have been hit by the campaign, the research firm said, without naming individual companies ... read more 02.12.2014
EU commission announces new scientific advisory body
BRUSSELS (div) -- EC President Jean-Claude Juncker appointed today Ann Mettler, as Head of the European Commission’s new in-house think-tank for policy analysis and planning, EPCS.
Mettler, 43, German-Swedish citizen, has been active in or related to market liberal organisations such as the World Economic Forum, the Lisbon Council or the OECD since 2000. The EPCS substitutes the former Commission’s bureau of policy advisors, BEPA, which has been scrapped this autumn for contoversial reasons ... read more 01.12.2014
Scottish students forced into loans
EDINBURGH (wsws) -- Student debt in Scotland has increased by two thirds in the last academic year, from £254m in 2013 to £430m in 2014, and the number of students resorting to loans rose five percent as financial support systems are slashed by austerity measures … read more 02.12.2014
Portuguese unions rally against evaluation test
LISBON (dn) -- Seven Portuguese education unions have announced strike action against the Proof of Knowledge and Capacity Assessment (PACC) mechanism. PACC is an evaluation test for teachering staff with less than five years service and required for access to the profession … read more 02.12.14
Dutch lecturers unite with new union
AMSTERDAM (scienceguide) -- The Lecturer Association (Lectorenvereniging) has been officially launched. The association, which has been welcomed by the government and emphasised as more than just a “union”, seeks to organise and unionise lecturers and has committed itself to increase the innovative power of the Netherlands by increasing the quality and significance of applied research … read more 04.12.2014
Careers not enhanced by journal publication?
MANCHESTER (um) -- Publishing in high impact journals may not enhance careers opportunities for economists, according to new research. Professor Dan Rigby, University of Manchester, found that “there is no connection between the journal’s scores based on the two alternative criteria of career progression and impact beyond academia” … read more 05.12.2014
New postgraduate loan system for UK
LONDON (bbc) -- Government backed student loans for postgraduates in the United Kingdom will be available for the first time for 40,000 students from 2016-17. The loans will be worth up to £10,000 and are expected to bring an extra 10,000 students into postgraduate study. George Osborne, UK Chancellor, said it would “revolutionise” access to postgraduate university courses … read more 03.12.2014
Glasgow university criticised for fossil fuel ban
GLASGOW (heraldscotland) -- The University of Glasgow has been attacked by its own academics for “vacuous posturing”. The university was the first institution in Europe to promise a ban on fossil fuel investments but five professors see the sanction as “deplorable”, as alternatives cannot currently meet demands … read more 05.12.2014
Switzerland joins Horizon 2020
BRUSSELS (italia2014.eu) -- Switzerland and the European Union are ready to cooperate in scientific and technological fields, with the signing of an agreement on Horizon 2020. The agreement allows Switzerland to participate in Horizon 2020, Euratom, the EU program for research and training, as well as activities on behalf of Fusion for Energy … read more 03.12.2014
German student coalition protests government cuts
HALLE (ND) -- Students in the southern German city of Halle have protested against planned cuts to university courses, culture, research and teaching. At the University of Halle, planned cancellations include courses in psychology, computer science and geosciences. The student coalition, Aktionsbündnis MLU, said “indispensable courses, numerous study courses and the quality of teaching and research are still severely threatened” … read more 03.12.2014
Swedish students convicted of defamation
STOCKHOLM (nt) -- Two students at Linköping University have been found guilty of defamation, after they falsely claimed in an exam that a man convicted of financial crimes was a criminal from an early age. The court judged that although the paper was only intended to be viewed by 20 fellow seminar students, the allegations of misrepresentation still stand. The students have been ordered to pay a fine ... read more 03.12.2014
Germany encourages grouping of innovative regions
BERLIN (bmbf) -- The Federal Ministry of Education and Research has announced a new funding initative in support of its High-Tech Strategy and the clustering of German excellence. The initiative funds the international cooperation and strategical exchange of German clusters and networks. Research minister Johanna Wanka said “the new funding approach … will deepen the global network of science and industry. This strengthens innovation in Germany” … read more 02.12.2014
Spanish inertia?
MADRID (universia) -- Although the economic crisis is often cited as being the main reason for Spain’s infamous mismatch between education and employment, a new survey has revealed that there may be other factors that lead to this reality. Included in the author's suggestions is an education system that is far too structured and rigid and that produces passive students with little emotional intelligence, a lack of initiative and an inability to undertake key tasks for companies … read more 02.12.2014
Toulouse, 2018 European Capital of Science
TOULOUSE (francetv) -- For the first time ever, a French city has been chosen as the European Capital of Science. From 2018, Toulouse will hold the prestigious title and will host European science conferences, thanks to its wealth of university subjects and its notable research expenditure, which is second only to Paris … read more 02.14.2014
UK investigation reveals controversial loan claims
LONDON (telegraph) -- Almost 1,000 European students, from countries including Romania and Bulgaria, wrongly received £5.4m to study at private colleges in the United Kingdom, an investigation has revealed. The Coalition has encouraged private providers in England to expand … read more 2.14.14
Big brother for Greek universities?
ATHENS (ie fimerida) -- In a meeting on the future of Greek higher education held yesterday, a University of Bradford’s security officer insisted that Greece follow in the UK’s footsteps and enforce tighter security measures for universities including hiring private security personnel who are able to make arrests, extensive CCTV camera coverage, controlled access to buildings and penalising students who do not carry ID cards ... read more 02.12.2014
Spanish university ‘inbreeding’ threatens research
MADRID (gaceta) -- 41 percent of Spanish teachers choose to work where they completed their studies, a report by the European Foundation for Information Society has found. The Foundation argues that a higher degree of ‘inbreeding’ in teacher recruitment results in an inferior production of scientific research. There have now been calls to reduce inbreeding in Spanish universities … read more 2.12.14
Germany could miss digital revolution
BERLIN (die welt) -- German universities are lagging behind in the digitalisation of study courses, with the number of students engaged in online courses increasing by only 1.7 percentage points over five years. The German Rectors’ Conference estimates that, of the country’s 10,000 courses, only 400 are offered as distance-learning programmes … read more 29.11.2014
Juncker’s investment plan receives official backing
BERLIN/PARIS (ksta) -- Germany and France officially support Jean-Claude Juncker’s plan to revitalise the European economy, although not as far as the European Commission President would like. The French and German finance ministers stated that neither country is prepared to contribute their own money to the investment plan, which is designed to provide 315 billion euros for investments in infrastructure, research, education and industry … read more 02.12.2014
Rankings unsuitable for French universities
PARIS (l’etudiant) -- French universities score poorly in international rankings, despite their globally recognised research. Frank Pacard, director of education and research at l’École polytechnique, points out the Anglo-Saxon model is unsuitable for French institutions as they “do not play on equal terms with big American universities, who can afford to hire Nobel Prize winners” … read more 01.12.2014
Nature free to view
INTERNATIONAL (nature) -- The scientific journal nature has announced a read-only content-sharing policy that will allow all of its research papers to be viewed and annotated online, but not copied, printed or downloaded. Initial reaction has been mixed … read more 02.12.2014
Rectors battle to save the PhD
BRUSSELS (hrk) -- European university rectors have warned against the dilution of the PhD, the first phase in a research-based career. Member states of the Bologna framework suggested that it should become a “third cycle”, after the Bachelor’s and the Master’s, with defined learning goals and ECTS points. Rectors’ conferences from France, Germany, Poland, Switzerland and the United Kingdom made a joint declaration, which is supported by education unions … read more 26.11.2014
Bulgaria has no ‘one’ university
SOFIA (standart) -- In an attempt to improve quality in education, the Bulgarian government wants to reduce the high number of Bulgarian institutions labelled ‘universities’. Education minister Todor Tanev said that a clear definition of higher education institutions must be found and the state is not willing to fund universities of “one thing”, such as the University of Music … read more 27.11.2014
Is Belarus suitable for the Bologna Process?
MINSK (vb) -- The Belarusian Ministry of Education has reapplied for membership in the Bologna Process. Their previous request was rejected in 2012 and the ministry has still failed to comply with any of the three conditions for accession: academic freedom, university autonomy and student participation in university management … read more 28.11.2014
Norway rejects controversial tuition fees
OSLO (universitetsavisa) -- The Norwegian government has shelved proposals to introduce tuition fees for non-European students. This comes as part of a larger budget compromise that includes a boost of 54 million kroner (€6.2 million) to higher education funding … read more 21.11.2014
Diploma recognition between Russia and France
MOSCOW (ria) -- Russia and France are to sign an agreement on the mutual recognition of diplomas, said Jean-Maurice Ripert, the French ambassador, at a meeting with university officials. It is hoped that the agreement will promote mobility between the countries. At the meeting, the participants also discussed Russian-French cooperation in the fields of science and education, including the joint creation of “laboratoires-miroirs” ... read more 01.12.2014

EU research money to be diverted to investment fund
BRUSSELS (science mag) -- The new European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker has sparked criticism in his proposal to divert €2.7 million from the Horizon 2020 budget into a new ‘Investment Plan for Europe’. Juncker claims the money will eventually benefit research, but some research organisations are doubtful. The League of European Research Universities released a statement claiming they regret the diversion of the money “for a vague and highly uncertain project” ... read more 27.11.2014
Bulgaria continues to lose graduates
SOFIA (news7) -- Around 10 percent of Bulgarian graduates, 7,000 students, leave the country every year to study abroad, with many choosing to settle in the host country after graduation … read more 30.11.2014
Czechs craving for recognition
PRAGUE (ceskatelevize) -- Czech society is dominated by a desire and a need for university degrees and academic titles, claims Rudolf Haňka who is chief scientific advisor to the Prime Minister. Haňka’s statement was backed by education minister Marcel Chládek, who said that employability must be prioritised … read more 30.11.2014
Universities pay the cost for Copyright Law in Spain
MADRID (abc) -- Spanish rectors expect the new Copyright Act, effective as of January 2015, will be costly. As it stands, universities will be charged a flat fee of five euros per year for each student who can access copyrighted documents, they will also have to pay a compensation fee to authors. The bill was passed with 172 votes in favour and 144 against … read more 27.11.2014
Belarus university-business relations underdeveloped?
MINSK (belarusian news) -- A Belarusian businessman has complained that his country’s universities are “underdeveloped” in the way they interact with the economy. He claimed that a stronger connection must be formed in order to raise professional levels of workers in the country. Finland was cited as a country to aspire to, where universities even accord curricula with companies … read more 28.11.2014
German President on scientific mission in Slovenia
LJUBLJANA (shanghai daily) -- German President Joachin Gauck began a two-day visit to Slovenia on Tuesday where he examined possibilities for expanding the strong ties in trade, science and research, the Slovenian president’s office said. During Mr Gauck’s visit, the University of Ljubljana and the Technical University of Berlin also signed an agreement on cooperation … read more 25.11.14
Foreign doctors in France prompt migration fears
PARIS (le monde) -- The number of doctors with a foreign degree in France has increased by 60 percent since 2007 and now represents 8.2 percent (22,568) of the country’s health professionals. This number could rise to 30,000 by 2020. Since over 40 percent of physicians holding a foreign degree obtained it in Romania, Patrick Romestaing, vice-president National Medical Board (CNOM) said these figures should “launch a debate on the consequences of migration in the European Union” … read more 27.11.2014
German universities attract more funding
BERLIN (aachener zeitung) -- The funding for research and teaching that German universities acquire from the state and the private sector has reached a record high, amounting to €6.3 billion in 2012 … read more 27.11.2014
Venetian students unite against ex-mayor Orsoni
VENICE (online news) -- Students at the University of Venice have protested against the potential recruitment of ex-mayor Giorgio Orsoni. Although Orsoni is currently awaiting trial, accused of illegal financing, the students have already written to the university president, claiming Orsoni does not display the ethical requirements of ‘transparency’ and ‘merit’ that characterise the university … read more 23.11.2014
Latvia promotes scientific excellence
RIGA (nra) -- The Latvian government has agreed to ring-fence 10 million euros for scientific development. The funds will support both the consolidation of Latvian scientific centres and the development of scientific excellence more generally … read more 28.11.2014
Erasmus+ programme to empower over 55s
BRUSSELS (gozo news) -- A new project launched under the Erasmus+ programme has been launched, aiming to improve the employability of individuals aged 55 and over. The strategy hopes to lead to the reduction of skills mismatch and supports the imparting of skills from older employees to a younger generation. The project will primarily focus on the financial services industry … read more 20.11.2014
Foreign graduates struggling in Finland
HELSINKI (yle) -- Less than half of all international students are employed in Finland within a year of graduation, with many of the foreigners employed in the hospitality and cleaning industries … read more 25.11.2014
Greek universities close for New Year
ATHENS (newsit) -- Greek Rectors have announced that they will not operate their universities in the new year, due to further budget cuts and a lack of extra funding. The rectors linked their economic problems to the huge increase in student transfers this year … read more 23.11.2014
No online diplomas for Poland
WARSAW (dziennikpolski24) -- Although more and more Polish universities are offering online courses, it remains impossible to receive a diploma through these remote classes. Due to higher education regulations in Poland, at least 40 percent of classes in the semester must take place traditionally, in university classrooms, and students must also attend the final exams in person. Dr Jacek Urbaniec, Rector's Plenipotentiary for E-learning at the Jagiellonian University, said that universities claiming to offer fully online courses are part of the problem … read more 28.11.2014
Hungary and Vietnam strengthen educational ties
HANOI (hirado) -- Hungarian and Vietnamese Rectors have participated in the inaugural Vietnamese-Hungarian Rectors’ Conference. János Áder, Hungarian President, announced that the number of Vietnamese student scholarships in Hungary would be doubled, citing his desires for greater internationalisation … read more 27.11.14
Russia: Intolerance against Muslim students
MOSCOW (fp) -- Russia appears to be taking serious moves to combat the “radicalization” of Muslims within its border. Recent pro-Islamic reports are complaining that Russia is banning the Islamic hijab and, perhaps even more decisively, key Islamic scriptures, on the charge that they incite terrorism: “Even educational institutions, including universities, have issued decrees banning the wearing of the hijab altogether.” Moscow’s Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University appears mentioned as one of the schools to forbid the donning of the hijab on its premises ... read more 25.11.2014
Finland charges non-European students
HELSINKI (yle) --Finnish universities and polytechnics predominately approve of the government’s desire to introduce tuition fees for students arriving from outside the EU and EEA. Students and youth organisations roundly condemn the move, seeing it as a threat to not only equal education, but also the national economy ... read more 26.11.2014
Netherlands charges towards open access
HAGUE (r.i.) -- Springer and the Association of Dutch Universities (VSNU) have finally agreed on the transition to open access. In a deal that also includes access to thousands of Springer’s journals, they committed to the swift implementation of open access publishing for publicly funded research. Sander Dekker, state secretary for education, said this was “a very important step in the right direction” as the Netherlands attempts to publish 100 percent of scientific output using open access by 2025 … read more 20.11.14
Cyprus co-op banks cut student loan rates
NICOSIA (cyprus mail) -- The Cyprus Co-operative Central Bank announced that they would be decreasing interest rates for student loans to 4.5 per cent and would introduce a scholarship programme ... read more 22.11.2014
Danish students study part-time?
COPENHAGEN (politiken) -- Students in Denmark do not spend enough time studying, according to a quality committee. Their report shows that Danish students generally spend 1,350 hours per year studying, roughly 20 percent less than what is necessary to constitute ‘full-time’ education, 1,650 hours. The committee also recommends changes to university entrance requirements and says that educational institutions should be given responsibility over how their funding is distributed: between teaching, research and development … read more 24.11.2014
Publishing: The peer-review scam
INTERNATIONAL (nature) -- In the past 2 years, journals have been forced to retract more than 110 papers in at least six instances of peer-review rigging. Researchers exploited vulnerabilities in the publishers’ computerised systems to dupe editors into accepting manuscripts, often by doing their own reviews ... read more 26.11.2014
Read also: Open access is tiring out peer reviewers
External exams for Ukrainian diplomas
DONBASS (rbc) -- The Ukrainian education and science ministry has detailed mechanisms for awarding diplomas and certificates to university and school graduates in the Donets Basin who cannot move for various reasons. Education minister Serhiy Kvit said the exams “will be done externally or remotely” … read more 24.11.2014
Anger over research budget cuts in France
STRASBOURG (francetv) -- Academics have expressed outrage at budget cuts at the University of Strasbourg. The university has witnessed the freezing of one quarter of public grants and 50 research-teaching positions. Academics, trade unionists, the Dean of the University as well as the collective “Sciences en Marche” gathered for the first time to discuss their demands ahead of a planned strike on the 11 December… read more 24.11.2014
Maltese youth feels fine without (pe)degree
VALETTA (malta today) -- A European Commission report has revealed that the number of students choosing not to attend university in Malta is the second highest in the EU. Education minister Evarist Bartolo said that the Maltese government wants to halve these figures by 2020. The government has allocated 5.5 million euros for scholarship schemes for Masters’ programmes … read more 13.11.2014
Gates Foundation goes open access
INTERNATIONAL (sciencemag) -- The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, one of the world’s largest grant-making foundations, has adopted a new policy of open access. Starting in 2017, researchers funded by the foundation must only publish their work in immediate open access journals. The organisation will pay the fees commonly charged by such journals … read more 21.11.2014
Irish professors enjoy unparalleled salaries
DUBLIN (independent) -- Despite falling university standards, six years of austerity budgets and governmental efforts to standardise university salaries, 1,093 of the 4,327 academic staff in the Irish universities earn more than €100,000 p.a.. The average pay levels surpassed comparable countries such as the UK, Canada and the US … read more 23.11.2014
Spain to recognise pre-Bologna titles
MADRID (diario crítico) -- The Spanish government have approved a decree allowing 140 Spanish pre-Bologna degrees to be of equal value to the European framework. The new rules will also impact upon the recognition of foreign degrees. It is hoped that this will help tackle the low level of internationalisation in Spanish universities, explained Montserrat Gomendio, state secretary for education … read more 21.11.2014
New Belgian course in university quality control
BRUSSELS (de morgen) -- Belgian education minister Hilde Crevits has said that college and university inspections are to stop, giving them greater freedom in quality monitoring. It is hoped, that by getting rid of ‘time-consuming’ external quality control, at least until 2020, there will be less administrative pressure on professors and several million euros can be saved ... read more 24.11.2014
Croatian cuts may incite brain drain
ZAGREB (slobodna dalmacija) -- Croatian postdocs abroad will not receive financial state support during their first year. As part of austerity measures, the government cancelled the ‘collective science agreement’. For the first time ever, these young scientists will have to rely entirely on funding from their overseas institutions. There are suggestions that this may result in the permanent emigration of many … read more 20.11.14
No chance for students in Berlin
BERLIN (tagesspiegel) -- Students looking for affordable, publicly subsidised student housing in Berlin have currently no chance. 165,000 students live in the German capital, only 95,000 places are available. Promises of outgoing mayor Klaus Wowereit to build 5,000 units, were not kept. The last concrete project, 178 flats in a northern suburb, failed due to investors’ greed. Good news though for Berlin’s shareconomy! ... read more 24.11.2014
Mosques to be built at 80 Turkish universities
ANKARA (hurriyet) -- Mehmet Görmez, President of Turkey’s Religious Affairs Directorate, has announced that mosques will be built in 80 state universities. Görmez stated that they “want the youth to have spiritual development and have access to mosques” … read more 21.11.2014
Scientists rally for threatened research agency
BRUSSELS (sciencemag) -- European scientists have opposed the Belgian government’s plans to scrap the Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO). BELSPO manages science institutes such as the Royal Observatory of Belgium and oversees the country’s contribution to the European Space Agency. The scientists, who have launched a petition against the plans, claim the move will leave Belgium “below the threshold of scientific … poverty” … read more 21.11.2014
Danes reform international recruitment
COPENHAGEN (pr) -- The Danish parliament is considering a new bill to reform the country’s international recruitment. The bill would facilitate the recruitment of highly skilled non-EU workers by introducing a new fast-track system for highly qualified employees, better conditions for researchers and a relaxation of the research tax system … read more 21.11.2014
Italy fights back against brain drain
ROME (repubblica) -- The Italian government is seeking to prevent and even reverse the brain drain of scientists and researchers from the country. As part of the reformed Stability Law, the resources behind tax credits for research and development will increase to 500 million euros … read more 19.11.2014
Denmark worried by surge in foreign students
COPENHAGEN (tv2) -- Following reports that the number of students from the European Union who receive the Danish state funded Educational Grant (SU) has increased tenfold in just two years, from 442 students to 4141. MP Jens Henrik Thulesen Dahl (DPP) has suggested that the increase should be ‘plugged’. Following an EU decision in 2013, students who come to Denmark from countries within the European Union are entitled to receive SU if they have at least 11 hours worth of study time per week. This has caused the explosion in foreign SU receivers, with suggestions that 3,000 students have come from Eastern Europe. Mr Dahl stated that the Danish “open market for education … now appears to be systemically exploited” and expressed fears that the SU budget framework will be breached: of the 390 million krone allocated to the SU, 204 million are already being used … read more 19.11.14
London students march for free education
LONDON (bbc) -- Thousands of students have marched through London protesting against education cuts, tuition fees and student debt. The ‘Free Education’ protest was not supported by the United Kingdom’s National Union of Students (NUS) and a number of arrests were made when the mostly peaceful protest descended on Parliament Square … read more 19.11.2014
Spanish and Portuguese universities to collaborate
LISBON (abc) -- To enhance the exchange of Spanish and Portuguese students and teachers, Eduardo Junco, the Spanish ambassador to Portugal, has promoted collaboration between the countries’ universities. Junco announced the incorporation of several institutions into the Iberian Network Entities Transboundary (RIET), a European organisation of cross-border cooperation … read more 18.11.14
Innovation of Dutch businesses plummets
ROTTERDAM (rsm) -- The Erasmus Competition and Innovation Monitor, run by the research institute INSCOPE, has revealed that the “capacity for innovation among Dutch companies has decreased substantially” when compared to previous years … read more 18.11.2014
Students protest against Mario Draghi in Rome
ROME (repubblica) -- Economic students at Roma Tre University led demonstrations against the President of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi, after his participation in a conference at the university. The students blame Mr Draghi for austerity measures that have caused increased insecurity and budget cuts at schools and universities … read more 13.11.2014
Free research threatened by grant distribution?
STOCKHOLM (svd) -- Swedish professors have claimed that the current system of unilateral research investment threatens free research as Swedish universities are managed by principles drawn from the business community rather than by research colleagues. The professors also suggest that publication in major journals is crucial for receiving research grants, meaning that only a small clique of researchers in so-called “elite centres” benefit from the awards while researchers with more everyday clinical problems have difficulty getting funding … read more 20.11.2014
New Director General of Higher Education in Portugal
LISBON (observador) -- In Portugal the position of Director-General of Higher Education has been filled by João António Rodrigues Sampaio Queiroz. According to a statement from the ministry, the biotechnology professor and rector of the University of Beira Interior in north-eastern Portugal, was chosen due to his “vast academic experience” ... read more 19.11.2014
Austrian companies invest greatly in research
VIENNA (kurier) -- Austria currently spends €9.07 billion (2.81 percent of GDP) on research and development and is ranked fifth in the European Union for such investment. The country largely owes this high rating to its domestic companies, who finance 69 percent of research … read more 17.11.2014
European research system “too fragmented”
PARIS (euractiv) -- Geneviève Fioraso, French state secretary for higher education and research, has criticised the current European system of research and the transfer of technology to industry. Ms Fioraso stated that the current model lacks flexibility and “is still too fragmented” and has called for “interdisciplinary teams integrating the human and social sciences“. The minister also lamented France’s limited participation in European research projects and expressed her desire to see greater involvement in the Horizon 2020 programme … read more 19.11.2014
White men dominate in UK universities
LONDON (guardian) -- There has been slow progress in reducing inequality at UK universities, with a staggering 80 percent of professors being men, and only 5.9 percent of academic staff being from black and minority ethnic backgrounds, according to a new study … read more 18.11.14
European Union budget talks collapse
BRUSSELS (esna) -- Negotiations for the 2015 budget between the European Parliament and the European Council have collapsed following disagreement over a workable budget. Parliament, who wants to reduce the growing number of outstanding bills, could not accept the Council’s proposal, which was revealed on the very last day of the budget talks. The Council suggested only half of what the European Commission had asked for to pay the most urgent bills, which included payments to the academic community. Jean Arthuis, leader of the parliamentary delegation, said that this dishonouring of commitments by the EU “puts entrepreneurs, researchers and Erasmus students in difficulty”. The Commission will now present a new draft budget, re-launching the procedure … read more 18.11.14
Spanish students defend public education
MADRID (20 minutos) -- Green Tide, a Spanish movement against the continued cuts to higher education, has launched a series of protests aimed at criticising government policies, with special emphasis on colleges … read more 19.11.2014
Turkish professor “violates right to education”
ISTANBUL (daily sabah) -- Esat Rennan Pekünlü, a lecturer at Ege University in Western Turkey, has been sentenced to two years in prison for banning students from entering the classroom wearing a headscarf. This case signifies the return of the headscarf debate, sparked in September when a law was passed allowing headscarves to be worn in secondary schools as well … read more 19.11.2014
Solidarity with foreign students in Norway
OSLO (adressa) -- Students in the Norwegian city of Trondheim have expressed their disagreement with the government proposal to introduce tuition fees for foreign students in a protest arranged by the Student Union. Recently Norwegian rectors also came out in support of foreign students, with half saying they would subsidise international students if the budget suggestion is approved ... read more 17.11.2014
Plagiarism explodes in the Balkans
ZAGREB (aljazeera) -- The Balkan regions have seen a huge increase in the number of advertisements brazenly offering seminar, graduate, masters and even doctoral theses. Although the purchase of such academic papers is an open secret, there is little evidence or information of the authorities taking action against the practice … read more 17.11.2014
Croatian rectors threaten constitutional complaint
ZAGREB (novelist) -- Croatian university rectors will seek a meeting with the Prime Minister after the Croatian finance minister, Boris Lalovac, included all university revenues and expenditures in the 2015 draft budget. This would allow the minister to see how the institutions, including those who do not receive income from the budget, spent their own revenues. The rectors have attacked this as a violation of the Croatian constitutional principle of university autonomy … read more 15.11.2014
Students flock to Poland
WARSAW (wyborcza) -- Although the internationalisation of Polish universities ranks low in the EU, the level of foreign students has risen by 23 percent in the last academic year. Most of them come from Ukraine, which, at 15,123, represents 42 percent of all foreign students in Poland … read more 14.11.14
Plagiarism controversy at French journalism school
PARIS (metro) -- The Parisian School of Journalism at Sciences Po is at the heart of a plagiarism scandal, after its Executive Director Agnes Chaveau was suspended for copying sentences in articles on the Huffington Post website. “Plagiarism is a serious matter in journalism … the school, which teaches ethics, cannot take these things lightly,” said the director of the prestigious school … read more 17.11.2014
European Commission science advisor scrapped
BRUSSELS (bbc) -- The European Commission has announced the termination of the role of EU Chief Scientific Adviser (CSA). The CSA was to “provide independent expert advice on any aspect of science, technology and innovation as requested by the President”. This comes as Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker formally closed the the Bureau of European Policy Advisers, which included the CSA. Researchers across Europe and British members of the European Parliament have expressed their dismay at Mr Juncker’s decision … read more 13.11.2014
New student housing project in Sweden
SKOPJE (skånskan) -- Eslöv council in southern Sweden are hoping to tackle student-housing shortages in Sweden with the purchasing of a plot of land on which they will build housing especially for students. The construction company Atmosfärhus Syd AB, which is behind the plans, hopes that students studying at the University of Lund and Malmö Academy will be enticed to stay in Eslöv, thanks partly to the good train links … read more 18.11.2014
Irish teachers propose corporate tax for education
DUBLIN (irish times) -- The staff-to-student ratios at Irish universities soared by 30 percent between 2008 and 2012, from 1:18 to 1:27. This deterioration is the effect of a 25 percent decrease in recurrent grant allocations to universities and colleges. Mike Jennings, general secretary of the Irish Federation of University Teachers, argues that graduate taxes and higher student loans will lead to an exodus of students. He pleas for a radical new approach, such as the allocation of a set percentage of corporate tax for the education sector … read more 18.11.2014
German university funding centralised
BERLIN (sr) -- A change of the German Basic Law now allows the federal government to finance universities directly. This was previously forbidden, in a 2006 law that stated that only single states gave the authority of higher education funding. In recent years, many of the regional states were unable to adequately finance their universities … read more 18.11.2014
Spanish humanities struggle on the labour market
MADRID (umh) -- A new national survey has described the difficulties of graduates of humanities within the Spanish labour market. From an analysis of 190,000 graduates, it emerged that humanities degree holders are much more likely to be unemployed. While medicine and engineering reach an employability of over 80 percent, not even half of graduates of history (45), arts (40) and languages (18-40 percent) can find a job … read more 17.11.14
Dutch students protest grant abolition
THE HAGUE (jdW) -- Thousands of Dutch students demonstrated on Friday in The Hague against the abolition of the state grant and the introduction of a loan system in its place. It is estimated that students under this new system will have to borrow up to €40,000. For education minister Jet Bussemaker the basic grant, introduced in 1986, is not “up-to-date” anymore, as the number of students has quadrupled in 28 years. Bussemaker believes that the one billion euros provided overtime by the grant abolition could be better spent boosting the quality of Dutch higher education … read more 14.11.2014
Angela Merkel insists India shouldn’t drop German
BERLIN (zee news) -- India’s move to drop German as a third school language has moved Chancellor Angela Merkel to raise the issue personally with Indian Prime Minister Narenda Modi … read more 15.11.2014
UNESCO launches World Library of Science
INTERNATIONAL (unesco) -- In collaboration with the educational division of Nature Publishing Group and Roche, the world’s largest biotech company, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation has launched the World Library of Science. This free, online, science education resource provides over 300 top-quality articles, 25 eBooks and over 70 videos from the publishers of Nature and “seeks to make science learning accessible to students everywhere in the world” … read more 07.11.2014
China to lead research investment
INTERNATIONAL (jsonline) -- A new report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has suggested that China will become the world's leading research-and-development economy by 2019, overtaking Europe, Japan and the USA … read more 12.11.2014
France pays twice for research publishing
PARIS (eur89) -- An investigation has revealed that the French research ministry paid Elsevier, the Dutch publishing company, 172 million euros for five years worth of publications. Although French taxpayers financed the initial publication and have now paid a second time for this research to be accessed by 476 educational institutions, they themselves will not be able to access it thanks to the subscription models that the monopolising journal publishers employ … read more 10.11.2014
Germany offers first Muslim scholarships
BERLIN (rp) -- In an unprecedented move, the German government has funded scholarships specifically for Muslim students. The ‘Avicenna-Studienwerk’ received a rush of applicants, the research ministry will allocate €10 million over the next five years … read more 17.11.14
Spanish students favour online education
BARCELONA (uoc.edu) -- The Open University of Catalonia (UOC) has revealed that over 230,000 undergraduate and postgraduate students are engaged in online university education in Spain. This represents 15 percent of all students in the country. The UOC also highlighted the interests of the business world in e learning … read more 15.11.2014
UK universities keen on EU student cash
LONDON (the) -- English universities are targeting the European Union for extra student
recruitment when the cap on undergraduates is lifted next year, prompting warnings about additional pressure on the student loans system. James Pitman, managing director for a student recruitment company, told the press the motivation for universities to recruit EU students was “volume, obviously; it’s revenue” ... read more 13.11.2014
Brits confuse education with business
LONDON (the) -- The British Times Higher Education magazine believes German education policy (with the aim of sending more students abroad) to be nothing more than an “industrial strategy, which requires highly skilled graduates to be able to operate across the world” ... read more 13.11.14
Clashes in the Greek universities
ATHENS (libcom) -- Rectors of several Greek universities called for police to block any possible occupations of university premises for the November 17th anniversary of the 1973 student uprising. The following clashes resulted in at least two injuries. Until recently the police were not allowed to enter university grounds ... read more 14.11.2014
Rise in foreign students at Polish universities
WARSAW (the news) -- Close to 36,000 foreigners are currently studying at Polish universities, marking an increase of almost 25 percent compared with the previous academic year ... read more 10.11.2014
Ukraine evacuates universities from occupied territories
KIEV (setimes) -- Thousands of professors and students are moving from eastern Ukraine to different regions across the country to continue the education process they said became “impossible” under the separatist regime. According to the education ministry of Ukraine, 11 universities have moved from the occupied territories to other regions of the country ... read more 12.112014
Research cost reform rejected in Europe
LONDON (ft) -- According to a senior European politician, plans to overhaul research costs have been rejected by the new pan-European financial regulator ESMA. The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) wanted to enact a Europe-wide ban on research costs being bundled with trading in dealing commissions. ESMA supported greater transparency from brokers instead and opted not to ban the use of commissions … read more 11.11.2014
Launch of the Nature Index
LONDON (nature) -- Science outputs of 20,000 institutions worldwide can now be easily analysed with the new Nature Index, a freely accessible website available at natureindex.com. The index tracks the author affiliations of nearly 60,000 scientific articles published per year ... read more 04.11.2014
Irish university chancellors denounce budget cuts
BELFAST (sluggerotoole) -- The vice-chancellors of Queen’s University and the University of Ulster have warned that following planned budget cuts, they will accept up to 1,100 fewer students next year. Northern Ireland’s executive has proposed a cut of 10.8 percent in funding for the Department of Education and Learning … read more 8.11.14
Have French business schools reached their limit?
PARIS (les echos) -- A recent report has revealed that the stability of French business schools may well be shaky. Apparently these schools have reached “the limits of their performance”, despite an increase in student numbers and tuition fees income their margins for financial manoeuvre continue to shrink … read more 11.11.2014
Italy internationalises with Tunisia
SIENA (ansamed) -- The University of Siena has signed an agreement with the Tunisian universities of Carthage and Sousse to foster collaboration and joint research projects within their territories. The partnership will also include exchange programmes for teachers and students … read more 7.11.14
Italian seismologists cleared of manslaughter
L’AQUILA (nature) -- Six seismologists accused of misleading the public about the risk of an earthquake in Italy were cleared of manslaughter on 10 November. An appeals court overturned their six-year prison sentences and reduced to two years the sentence for a government official who had been convicted with them.
The verdict prompted many L’Aquila citizens outside the courtroom to react with rage, shouting “shame” and saying that the Italian state had just acquitted itself. But it comes as a relief to scientists around the world who had been following the unprecedented case with alarm ... read more | and here 10.11.2014
French students disadvantaged in Quebec?
QUEBEC (lemonde) -- 12,000 French students studying in Quebec may face higher tuition fees if an agreement cannot be reached between François Hollande, French President, and Philippe Couillard, Quebec Premier. These students currently pay the same yearly amount as their Quebec counterparts, around 1,500 euros, thanks to a previous agreement. There are also suggestions that quotas may be introduced at Quebec universities for French students … read more 05.11.2014
Portuguese polytechnics face devaluation
LISBON (notícias ao minuto) -- José Ferreira Gomes, Portuguese state secretary for higher education, has proposed that there be more differentiation between universities and polytechnics in the country. “The two different systems have different goals,” he said. This could mean that entry requirements are much lower for those applying for polytechnics … read more 11.11.2014
Macedonia and Croatia begin student exchanges
SKOPJE (macedonia online) -- Engineering and IT faculties in Skopje, Macedonia, and Zagreb, Croatia, have agreed on a new cooperation programme that will involve numerous professors, students and interns. The traditionally close ties between the educational institutions of both countries have been reinforced by a five-year plan … read more 10.11.14
Drastical reduction of student places in Denmark
COPENHAGEN (politiken) -- Sofie Carsten Nielsen, the Danish science and education minister, has announced an agreement with Universities Denmark over the controversial cuts to university courses. The new plan gives universities freedom in distributing the cutbacks over disciplines and graduate programmes will only be reduced after 2018. The plan asks universities to close around 3,500 places in undergraduate programmes and 2,400 places in graduate courses … read more 04.11.2014
Crato denies Portugal has too many graduates
LISBON (destak) -- Portuguese Minister of Education, Nuno Crato has spoken out about German president Angela Merkel’s comments that Portugal has “too many university graduates”. Crato responded by saying that Portugal will continue to invest in education. He did however stress the importance of students having multiple options when leaving university, including access to vocational training … read more 05.11.2014
Lectures in Romania cancelled during elections
BUCHAREST (romania-insider) -- The Romanian Ministry of Education has proposed that university classes be suspended in the country on Friday and Monday. They hope that doing so would encourage more students to vote in the presidential election … read more 11.11.2014
MEPs to discuss future of copyright
BRUSSELS (eu) -- Legal affairs and culture committees have met with academics, representatives of content creators and distributors, and European Commission experts to discuss how copyright laws can keep up to date with technological developments. New Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker has said he wants to modernise current copyright rules “in the light of the digital revolution” ... read more 11.11.14
Disabled students disadvantaged in Spain
MADRID (el economista) -- Spanish people with disabilities are still at a disadvantage when it comes to access to jobs and education. It was reported that the percentage of students achieving higher education among the disabled population is 15 percent, half of the amount of students without disabilities … read more 10.11.2014
Poland granted millions for research
WARSAW (finanse) -- The European Investment Bank has granted Poland a loan of 700 million euros to support major investments in research, development and innovation in Poland’s knowledge economy and its digital administration … read more 06.11.2014
Greek universities suffocated by transfers
THESSALONIKI (agelioforos) -- The administrations of three universities in Thessaloniki have asked for state assistance in renting temporary classrooms and hiring temporary staff in the face of 3,000 transferring students who may “sink” their auditoriums. Pericles Mitkas, rector of the Aristotle University, stated, “We have students standing. The lecture halls are overcrowded and can not meet the requirements”. Mr Mitkas’ institution is expected to receive an additional 1,808 students … read more 10.11.2014
Spain struggling to monetise research
MADRID (abc) -- A study has revealed that universities in Spain face huge barriers when it comes to using academic research for economic purposes. Tona Rubio, the author of the study, writes that Spanish universities are “slow and uncompetitive” and “far removed from the market” ... read more 8.11.14
Dutch universities undermined by English language?
AMSTERDAM (refdag) -- English language education in Dutch universities has been rising exponentially in recent years but several university lecturers have now claimed such education is disastrous for students, teachers and Dutch society in general … read more 07.11.2014
International outrage after journal withdrawal
LISBON (publico) -- The Portuguese Regulatory Authority for the Media (ERC) will launch an investigation into the University of Lisbon’s Institute of Social Sciences’ (ICS) suspension and withdrawal of the Análise Social journal. The ICS suspended the journal because of a visual essay by Ricardo Campos that, according to the institute, “contained offensive material that impaired the reputation of the ICS” and the journal. This controversy has generated widespread criticism of the ICS from hundreds of Portuguese and international academics who sympathise with the author and who claim the suspension violates the academic freedom of publication … read more 09.11.2014
German students show no political interest
BERLIN (huffington post) -- German science minister, Johanna Wanka, has expressed her concern that 30 percent of the German student population (compared to 42 percent in 2010), “the leaders of tomorrow”, feel indifferent towards politics, as they believe it has no bearing on them. According to a recent national student survey , German students are also more conservative, consumerist, risk-averse and hostile against forgeigners than four years ago … read more 27.10.2014
Three out of four Swiss students seek jobs during studying
BERN (blick) -- Although university courses are structured and designed for full-time study, 72 percent of Swiss students entered paid employment alongside their courses in 2013. Family support still provides the bulk of funding at 51 percent, while student employment constitutes 39 percent … read more 30.10.14
Belgian medical graduates crisis
LIEGE (7sur7/rtbf) -- Almost half of all final year Francophone medical students may be unable to practice medicine after graduating, as they will be denied ‘Inami’ numbers. These limited numbers constitute a ‘numerus clausus’ since they are used by the Belgium state to regulate the number of recognised doctors in the country. Representatives from both sides of the linguistic border have been working to find solutions to the on-going crisis but the Flemish Council of Medical Students (VGSO) has challenged attempts to obtain numbers for all Francophone graduates in medicine and dentistry … read more 03.11.2014
Gender politics in Austrian university theses
VIENNA (freie welt) -- Since the early 1990s, political correctness has become an increasing trend in the public discourse of German speaking countries. The news that students at the Vienna Vocational Training Institute are obliged to write their theses in a ‘gender-neutral form’, has stirred up a heated discussion on political correctness in Austria … read more 03.11.14
European universities unfazed by international rankings
MADRID (europa press) -- According to a report carried out by the European University Association, only two in five European institutions heed the results from international rankings. The authors of the study pointed to the ‘limitations’ of these types of rankings, and recommended that universities do not refer to them when making important decisions about the allocation of university resources … read more 08.11.2014
Scottish students crowdfund castle for refugees
ABERDEEN (pressandjournal) -- Scottish students from Aberdeen University have launched a crowdfunding initiative to purchase a £6 million castle as a sanctuary for starving asylum seekers. The students see the house wasted as a “playground for the mega-rich” and they intend to create a vibrant community of refugees in the estate … read more 03.11.2014
Plagiarism among scientists more common
INTERNATIONAL (the scientist) -- An extensive combination and analysis of 17 surveys that involved thousands of scientists has suggested that the proportion of scientists who have witnessed incidents of plagiarism is around 30 percent. This overwhelms previous estimates, which proposed percentages between 0.15 and 11 percent … read more 03.11.2014
French tax credit boosts industrial R&D funding
PARIS (challenges) -- The French tax credit (CIR) has caused an increase in industrial research and development (R&D) investments. A study has shown that CIR, which reduces research costs by 25 percent, helped to support company investments in R&D worth 5.3 billion euros between 2007 and 2012. This figure is 1.5 times higher than the costs of the tax credit to the state … read more 04.11.2014
Wage dumping at German universities
BERLIN (pr) -- Many of the 94,000 lecturers - twice as many as 15 years ago - are not even paid the minimum wage, 8.50 euros, their contracts are temporary. Andreas Keller, president of the Education and Science Workers’ Union (GEW), demanded the end of this “wage dumping” and to precarious employment at German universities ... read more 06.11.2014
EU donation revamps Serbian universities
BELGRADE (b92) -- The European Union has provided 30 million euros for Serbia’s “High Education Teaching Infrastructure Project (HETIP)”. This allowed the renovation of 27 university buildings and included labs, research facilities, teaching and utility facilities … read more 31.10.14
Serbian academics call for support
BELGRADE (inserbia) -- Participants in a debate at the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts (SANU) have called for a significant increase in the national science budget. Aleksandar Belić, State Secretary at the Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, highlighted the stagnating funding for 12,500 Serbian researchers. Ljubisav Rakić, Vice President of the Academy, called on the wider scientific community to help resolve the vital issues … read more 04.11.14
Partial default on French university grant worries rectors
PARIS (vousnousils) -- French university presidents have expressed dismay at a 20 percent reduction in this year’s university funding. They have indicated that this cutback may result in unpaid employees’ salaries in December. Jean-Loup Salzmann, president of the Conference of University Presidents, warned that if the 20 percent fell through, “more than two thirds of universities would be in the red” … read more 30.10.2014
Engineering fast-track abandoned in Norway
OSLO (tu) -- The plan to allow vocationally trained students to access colleges and universities in Norway without supplementary training caused outrage when implemented in 2013. Now the government have gone back on their promise, and hopes the decision will have a positive effect on quality of education in the country. “The intention was good, but it is bad policy for engineering studies,” said Røe Isaksen of TU University. “It would have done the students a disservice” … read more 30.10.2014
Unequal financing in ERA-NET schemes
BRUSSELS (neth.er) -- From 2002 to 2013, the European Union invested €483 million into the so-called ERA-NET scheme, designed to support the coordination and collaboration of national research programmes. A report found that “Germany and the UK alone represent one third of the public funding” … read more 03.11.2014
Croatian students drawn abroad
ZAGREB (tportal) -- Since joining the European Union and gaining free movement on the continent, more and more Croatian students choose to study abroad. The share of Croats studying in neighbouring Bosnia has jumped to 18 percent from 12.5 in 2010, attracted by lower rent and tuition costs and lower grade barriers to entry … read more 2.11.14
Swiss rectors: “The boat is full”
ZURICH (nzz) -- The presidents of the Swiss Federal Technology Institutes in Zurich and Lausanne have proposed limits on the number of foreign students at their institutions. Patrick Aebischer, president of Lausanne’s institute, said “We are pleased with all our foreign students but we are reaching our capacity.” The word “quota” has been avoided so far … read more 28.10.2014
Standardisation as the future of research?
BRUSSELS (neth.er) -- According to the conference ‘Standards: Your Innovation Bridge’, researchers should involve standardisation in their work as soon as possible to support and generate innovation. Many calls under Horizon 2020 require insight into how standardisation is a part of research projects, an indicator for the impending necessity of the practice … read more 31.10.2014
Maastricht proves popular for Irish students
BELFAST (irish mirror) -- An increasing number of Northern Irish university students are choosing to study in the Netherlands, attracted by low tuition fees, various courses in English and well supported preparation for graduate careers … read more 29.10.2014
USA releases ‘Best Global Universities’ rankings
WASHINGTON (usnews) -- U.S. News and World Report has released the first edition of its new university ranking system, ‘Best Global Universities’. The American media company enters an international classification market previously dominated by Britain and Shanghai. The rankings are based on data and metrics provided by research analysts at Thomson Reuters and features the top 500 universities across 49 countries … read more 28.10.2014
LinkedIn unveils original university ranking system
INTERNATIONAL (blog.nl.edu) -- LinkedIn, the business-oriented social networking service, has launched its unique take on university rankings. The site analysed its extensive database of members and catalogued where they had studied and whom they have worked for, which generated original rankings based on employment trends … read more 29.10.14
Agreement on university cuts in Denmark
COPENHAGEN (dr) -- Denmark’s controversial education budget cuts have now been agreed upon by ministers and universities. The Danish government caused outrage in October when it proposed getting rid of 4,000 study places with low job prospects. The new plan looks only marginally different from the original, with the axing of certain subjects beginning in 2020, rather than the original 2018. The decision has caused outrage by academics and students alike ... read more 04.11.2014
Female students dominate dentistry in Norway
OSLO (yle uutiset) -- Almost 80 percent of dental students in Norway are female and this figure has increased dramatically over the past 10-15 years. President of the Norwegian Dental Association Bergens Tidende explained that the dental profession may be more attractive to women because of increased flexibility … read more 05.11.2014
Controversy over Austrian University Act
VIENNA (presse) -- University rectors, the Austrian national student union and the women’s ministry have criticised proposed regulatory changes to the proportion of female university students. The amendment will introduce gender parity for females instead of the current 40 percent quota. Parity would allow men to contest the figures should the female proportion rise above 50 percent … read more 30.10.14
Finland plans to charge international students
HELSINKI (yle) -- Following similar policies by other Scandinavian countries, Finland is planning to introduce tuition fees for students coming from outside Europe. Minimum fees of €4,000 will be payable each year under government plans, starting in 2016 … read more 29.10.2014
80,000 students on strike in Canada
MONTREAL (telesur) -- 50,000 people hit the streets of Montreal to reject the Liberal government’s cuts to health, education, and public services. Thousands of students from Quebec colleges and universities participated following a vote by 82,000 students for one-day strike to coincide with the march. Students in Quebec made headlines world-wide after going on strike for several months to protest proposed tuition fee increases in the province. At its peak 250,000 students were participating in daily actions ... read more 29.10.2014
Precarious lives of Italian researchers
ROME (la stampa) -- Only one percent of Italian researchers have any possibility of job stabilisation. Recent data from the education ministry has revealed that there are 2,450 researchers on temporary ‘type A’ contracts and only 224 on ‘type B’. Type A contracts expire at a maximum of five years and the researcher is then forced to leave the institution. Type B contracts are the only ones that allow a promotion to associate professor after three years. Under these worrying conditions, 99 percent of Italian researchers will be expelled from the academic system, up from 96 percent last year … read more 03.11.2014
Belgian research budget axed
BRUSSELS (de morgen) -- The Belgian government are to cut 46 million euros from its science budget over the next five years. The research contracts with the eleven federal scientific institutions will be reduced by €8.8 million to just 44 million. François Englert, Belgian Nobel laureate in physics, says this move constitutes an “an axe in one of Belgium’s biggest engines of growth” and the country will lose “one of its greatest assets” … read more 27.10.2014
Glass ceiling for women in German academia
BERLIN (taz.de) -- Female academics in Germany have a much tougher time than men, according to a new study. A number of women complain that the expectation that doctoral students work beyond contractually agreed working hours means that those who have to take on child care (statistically more likely to be women) are left in an impossible position. The study also claims that universities have been failing for a long time to promote women and that more programs are needed to break this ‘glass ceiling’ … read more 29.10.2014
Dutch universities struggle for open access
THE HAGUE (dn) -- The current negotiations between Dutch universities’ association VSNU and the publishing house Reed Elsevier about free access to academic articles have reached an impasse. The universities want to move in line with education ministry policy that by 2020, all academic publications should be open access because they are mainly financed with public money. But Elsevier made a proposal last week which in no way addresses this necessary change ... read more 04.11.2014
Scottish borrowing soars to record levels
EDINBURGH (guardian) -- Tuition may be free in Scotland, but student debt for the last academic year has risen drastically to £430 million, after the government cut the grants they could claim by 40 percent. The heaviest burden is falling on the poorest students, as overall spending on grants for living costs have been reduced from £89 million to £53 million last year. “These are startling figures” said Scottish higher education expert Lucy Hunter Blackburn … read more 28.10.2014
Stalinism at Dutch universities
AMSTERDAM (punt) -- Performance agreements and evaluation do not necessarily improve teaching and research quality at Dutch universities and colleges. On the contrary, according to a report by student unions, performance agreements have become formal barriers to prevent discussion between students, teaching staff and the administration … read more 29.10.14
Marking boycott in UK will hit 69 universities
LONDON (bbc) -- Thousands of British university students’ exams will be cancelled, and their coursework left unmarked due to an academic boycott by academics, who are angry at proposed changes to their pensions. The University and College Union says the action will involve a total of 69 universities. The universities’ association UUK condemned the strike as a “damaging course of industrial action” ... read more 27.10.2014Athenian university senate held hostage
ATHENS (greekreporter) -- A board meeting at the University of Athens turned into a hostage situation when fifty students held the university’s senate members captive. The students were protesting against dean Theodoros Fortsakis’ decision to hire a private security company for campus security … read more 30.10.2014
Deregulated police university access denied
MADRID (abc) -- The rector of the University Alcalá de Henares has rejected a controversial governmental protocol that was proposed to all Madrilenian universities. The plan would allow national police to enter university campuses without authorisation, while before they were denied access without the permission of the rector. The Spanish Workers’ Commission had demanded the immediate withdrawal of the protocol, which they regard as a frontal attack on freedom of expression, assembly and association … read more 28.10.2014
German-Arab ties strengthened
BERLIN (freie presse) -- A cooperation project has been established between Berlin’s Technical University and a number of universities in Egypt, Palestine, Iraq, Jordan, Bahrain, Yemen, Lebanon, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Syria and the United Arab Emirates. At a 3-day conference in Chemnitz, Germany, increasing student exchanges between universities, expanding technology transfer, teaching and research connections were discussed … read more 30.10.2014
United States of Europe?
MADRID (the) -- Kurt Deketelaere, secretary general of the League of European Research Universities, has expressed his dissatisfaction with the Bologna Process and has claimed that EU-wide legislation may
be required to truly enable the free movement of students and researchers. Mr Deketelaere encouraged a merger of different European pedagogies and performance assessments, demanding that the European Union work “as one bloc from the higher education and research perspective” … read more 30.10.14
German research investment rockets
BERLIN (deutschlandfunk/bmbf) -- The federal and state governments in Germany have agreed on an expansion to the Higher Education Pact, which will last until 2020. This contains, amongst other benefits, a multi-billion dollar package for research funding and an extension to the Excellence Initiative. Johanna Wanka, education and research minister, said that they had "put together a tremendous package” … read more 30.10.2014
Continuous testing superior to terminal?

Norwegian universities plan merger
STAVANGER (nrk) -- The Norwegian universities of Stavanger and Høgskolen Stord / Haugesund are preparing to merge faculties. This move is in line with the Norwegian education ministry’s restructuring plans for the country’s higher education landscape. The government is expected to publish a white paper on the sector in spring 2015 ... read more 27.10.2014
Austrian student union wants ban on nationalistic dress
VIENNA (heute) -- In the fight against right-wing extremism, the University of Vienna Student Union has called for a ban on nationalistic forms of dress on university grounds. The Union demands that university representatives make a “public and clear statement against right-wing extremist and German national ideology”. The Cartellverband (Austria’s largest student and academic association) vehemently opposes these plans, calling them “authoritarian” … read more 27.10.2014
Russian universities to boost regional development
MOSCOW (ria) -- The Russian President, Vladimir Putin, has declared that Russian universities must become “a centre for the development” of their regions and should focus on the training required by inhabitants. Mr Putin noted that new ship and aircraft building enterprises are being constructed in the Russian Far East and these must be accommodated for with relevant training … read more 30.10.14
Scant Serbian research funding
BELGRADE (rtv) -- Although Serbia is charged with coordinating scientific developments within the Danube region, it surprisingly spends less than one percent of its gross domestic product on research and development, investment in human resources and knowledge societies. This is five times less than the funds recommended by the EU … read more 29.10.2014
Ukrainian universities on wheels
KIEV (poisk) -- The Ukrainian education ministry has announced that Donetsk National University will resume its educational activities in Vinnytsya, located over 800 km west, in early November. This relocation is one of many others as several south-eastern universities are also being transferred to ‘replacement’ cities … read more 24.10.2014
Lithuanian students predict university reduction
VILNIUS (balticcourse) -- The Lithuanian national students’ union (LSS) has given an unconventional forecast for the future of Lithuanian universities. LSS say that competition in the educational field will force improvements in educational quality, which will only be possible by consolidating university resources and merging institutions. This will reduce the number of Lithuanian higher education institutions and universities by 2030 … read more 17.10.2014
German students more apathetic than ever
BERLIN (sued deutsche) -- German students are highly satisfied with their university education, a new study has revealed. So much so in fact that the rate of political engagement amongst students is now lower than ever. Where in 2001 45 percent of respondents described their political interest as “very strong”, now only a third would claim so. Education Minister Johanna Wanka suggested this could be described a “general trend towards political passivity and apathy” amongst students ... read more 29.10.2014
Research organisations sound alarm over EU budget
BRUSSELS (div) -- Hundreds of European research and technology organisations have called on the Council of Ministers to avoid cuts in the EU budget for 2015. As recently expressed by Commissioner Máire Geoghegan-Quinn, “a sword of Damocles is hanging over Horizon 2020 in the Budget 2015.” Cutting by 10 percent the EC’s Draft 2015 Budget for research payment appropriations – as proposed by the EU Council - would represent a €1 billion budget decrease for the Research Budget ... read more | and here 27.10.2014
Swiss Universities want cap on foreign students
ZURICH (srf) -- Rectors from the federal Technical universities of Zurich and Lausanne claim that they have reached the limits of their capacity and are demanding that the number of foreign students be limited. “This is discriminatory and xenophobic” said a representative of the Swiss Federation of Student Bodies. The timing of the demands is “tricky”, explained ETH Zurich University Spokesman Roman Klingler, with mass immigration currently dominating the political agenda in the country … read more 29.10.2014
The stars within reach for Polish science
WARSAW (focus) -- Poland has signed an agreement with the European Southern Observatory (ESO). This research organisation in the field of astronomy will offer Poland’s scientific community access to highly sophisticated equipment and will cover travel and residential costs. Marek Sarna, professor at the Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Centre, describes this deal as a “ground-breaking” moment for Polish science … read more 29.10.2014
Educational imbalance in Belarus
MINSK (eurobelarus) -- The number of Belarusians applying to universities in Minsk has more than quadrupled in 13 years, up from 8,000 to 34,000 in 2013. One third of all students choose to study in the nation’s capital, with many never returning to their region … read more 28.10.2014
Serbian minister commends volunteering
BELGRADE (inserbia) -- Srdjan Verbic, Serbian education minister, has called on Serbian companies taking part in the Danube Strategy to welcome students who volunteer for the projects. Mr Verbic stated “there are thousands of students who would like to take part … for free and show their competencies”, allowing them to get a job more easily later … read more 27.10.2014
Programme for outstanding Polish students
WARSAW (rmf24) -- The exposé of Prime Minister Ewy Kopacz has revealed plans to finance the studies of Poland’s brightest students. The programme will begin in 2016 and will cover the monetary costs of 100 “outstanding” students who “promise hope for trends, research and innovative ideas” and “get into the top 29 universities in the world,” explains science minister Lena Kolarska-Bobińska … read more 27.10.2014
Subsidies for Romanian entrepreneurs
BUCHAREST (incont) -- Young Romanians aged between 18 and 25 and Romanian students will benefit from a new initiative aimed at encouraging independent activity and development. The ‘Romania Start-Up’ program will allocate 100 million euros for companies that are newly created by youths and students will be helped to develop entrepreneurship with mentoring sessions, workshops and training … read more 22.10.2014
Ukrainian ‘traitors’ lose academic titles
LUGANSK (uapress) -- Lecturers at universities in Lugansk who voluntarily united with the self-proclaimed Lugansk People’s Republic will be deprived of their scientific statuses. The Ukrainian education ministry is planning regulatory changes to facilitate the removal of professorial and associate professorial titles from persons voluntarily working in separatist controlled universities ... read more 25.10.2014
Reintroduction of tuition fees in Germany?
BERLIN (westen) -- Just as Germany inspired many by becoming completely tuition-fee free, the debate has been reignited, with some claiming they should be reintroduced. “An appropriate and socially equitable participation of students in the financing process makes sense” claims Ursula Gather, chairman of a regional rectors’ conference. But many politicians are reluctant to open the debate up again. Education minister Ludwig Spaenle stated, “we have conducted a societal debate… In the end, the result is that the general public and not individual families pay for study” … read more 29.10.2014
One third of Turkish youth neither in work nor education
ISTANBUL (hurriyet) -- Concerns are rising in Turkey over the rapid increase in unemployment amongst young people. This is coupled with a worryingly sharp decrease in Turkish youth attending education. Currently only a third of Turkey’s 11.7 million young people are in education, with another third working and the final third not working at all ... read more 27.10.2014
German professors embark on partnership with Santander
MÖNCHENGLADBACH (ots) -- The German University Association (DHV) has partnered with Santander Universities. Santander Universities, a subdivision of Santander Consumer Bank AG, will support students from non-academic and often immigrant backgrounds with scholarship programmes. The bank will also supplement the annual ‘Rector of the Year’ award with 10,000 euros ... read more 17.10.2014
Saarland University cuts travel burdens
SAARBRÜCKEN (pr) -- Students at Saarland University who wish to visit partner universities within the ‘Greater Region’ for academic purposes can be supported in their travel costs. Saarland University has joined its associates in Liege, Lorraine and Luxembourg in setting up a mobility fund to reduce the financial burden for students ... read more 22.10.2014
Italian scientists pushed to the brink by spending cuts
ROME (sciencemag) -- Announcements to make further cuts to universities and research centers has caused outcry from students and researchers. New cuts will strangle research, says physicist Francesco Sylos Labini of the Enrico Fermi Center in Rome. “Cuts will have a dramatic consequence in hiring new people and the financial resources for research,” he explained. The body representing Italy’s university system (CUN) published an open letter online asking Prime Minister Renzi to cancel the latest round of cuts … read more 22.10.14
Luxembourg promotes open access
WALFERDANGE (paperjam) -- In conjunction with Open Access Week, the University of Luxembourg has made almost 8,000 scientific publications and more than 14,500 researchers’ publication references freely available on the website Orbilu (Open Repository and Bibliography) … read more 21.10.2014
Clash between police and students in Ankara
ANKARA (todayszaman) -- Police cracked down on student demonstrations held at two universities in the Turkish capital Ankara. Students protested against the Islamic State attacks on the Syrian Kurdish town of Kobani.
At the Middle East Technical University in Ankara (ODTÜ), they wanted to march from the University to the office of the ruling Justice and Development Party and were blocked by the police at the school’s gate with water cannons, rubber bullets and tear gas … read more 9.10.14
Outcry at ‘humanities massacre’ in Denmark
COPENHAGEN (uwn) -- Government plans to cut 4,000 student places from faculties of humanities in Danish universities have created uproar among academics and the general population. Dean of humanities at Copenhagen University, Ulf Hedtoft, described the government decisions as a “massacre of the humanities”. A petition is also being circulated, calling for a “stop to the shortsighted intervention in Danish universities” and attracted almost 4,000 signatures in the first two days of being launched… read more 22.10.2014
Peruvian postgrads gain Belgian backing
LIMA (andina) -- The Peruvian education ministry and the Belgium Higher Education Academy have signed an inter-institutional agreement to promote academic cooperation between the countries. This agreement will provide scholarships to financially disadvantaged Peruvians and will allow them to pursue scientific and technological postgraduate studies at Belgium universities … read more 23.10.2014
Holland registers Chartered Engineers
HAGUE (cobouw) -- The Dutch Royal Institute of Engineers (KIVI) has announced an agreement with the British Engineering Council. This will permit the ‘Chartered Engineer’ quality mark to be issued in the Netherlands, making KIVI the first professional association allowed to grant the title outside the territory of the British Engineering Council … read more 20.10.14
Low fees, but high cost of living in France
PARIS (uwn) -- Students in French universities pay among the lowest fees in Europe, but despite that students are suffering with a rise in the cost of living. According to a report , a student has to spend on average 2,500 euros to start the university year, 2 percent more than last year. The main reasons were higher rent and increases in unavoidable expenses such as enrolment fees, university meals and social security payments ... read more 24.10.2014
British private school kids flocking to overseas universities
LONDON (telegraph) -- More and more students from leading UK private schools are taking university courses abroad. A survey of members of the Headmasters’ and Headmistresses’ Conference found that a concern for tuition fee prices was the main reason for this rise, coupled with an increased awareness of opportunities abroad … read more 25.10.2014
Turkey struggles with low academic quality
ISTANBUL (hurriyet) -- The number of Turkish universities has increased from 73 to 184 in 12 years. The number of scientific publications from Turkey that have made their way to international science indexes is 120,000. But their impact factor is only 4.55. What about academia, asks Hurriyet columnist Taha Akyol. Can that academia meet the challenge of growth and quality? ... read more 23.10.2014
The impact of austerity on EU universities
LONDON (the) -- Post-crash austerity measures have buffeted university funding across Europe in the past six years. How are some countries faring on state funding, according to a recent EUA report? ... read more 23.10.14
Danish post-graduate studies less flexible

Europe ‘risks dividing science and development policy’
BRUSSELS (scidev) -- A revamp of the European Commission’s set-up could hamper cooperation between its development and research arms, say observers, as European Parliament hearings start this week to approve the commissioners who will oversee each portfolio ... read more 29.10.2014
UK student visa rules condemned by employers
LONDON (bbc) -- A business leader has accused politicians of “cheap and pathetic gestures” in their approach to student visas in the UK. He joins a debate following warnings from universities that the student visa process has become so rigorous that it is putting people off. Universities have lobbied for students not to be included in net migration figures ... read more 23.10.2014
New European Commission includes Navracsics
STRASBOURG (eu/euractiv/politics.hu) -- The European Parliament has approved Jean-Claude Junker’s team of European commissioners, with Tibor Navracsics as commissioner of culture, education, youth and sports. This comes despite resistance from MEPs who claim that Mr Junker ignored their demands of consigning Mr Navracsics to a position outside culture and education. The new commissioner has, however, been stripped of the citizenship portfolio … read more | video 22.10.14
Benedek Javor, MEP of the Dialogue for Hungary (PM) party, criticised Juncker for “disregarding” the European Parliament’s objections to several candidates, including Navracsics, who had been “clearly rejected” by the relevant EP committee ... read more 23.10.2014
ID checks at University of Athens cause uproar
ATHENS (ekathimerini) -- Plans introduced by University of Athens rector Theodoros Fortsakis to impose identity checks on any unauthorised guests on campus have met with severe opposition from students and academics. Students staged protests at the main building and padlocked the gates of the Philosophy building following the announcement, claiming that it would damage free exchange of ideas at the university … read more 23.10.2014
University of Rome aids development of cultural community
ROME (bitculturali) -- A cultural project launched in Rome’s schools has been supported by the University Rome III and its rector, Mario Panizza, in order to aid cultural development in the city. The project aims to raise historical awareness and promote the area among the community. The University students will participate in programmes aimed educating the younger students but also developing the campus into not only an academic community but a residential one … read more 23.10.2014
Science research halted by lack of funding in Czech Republic
PRAGUE (rozhlas) -- The crucial scientific research undertaken at eight international facilities in the Czech Republic has been stopped due to lack of funding. The Ministry of Education has allegedly not provided the money they promised … read more 23.10.2014
Google offers technology courses
MADRID (elpais) -- The technology giant Google has recently started an initiative in Spanish universities that will train students in the use of new technologies. Google will offer five free online courses of 40 hours in e-commerce, app development, data analysis, cloud computing and digital marketing. This marketing course will also be taught in selected classrooms of 23 public Spanish universities … read more 20.10.14
Bertelsmann expands E-learning division
GÜTERSLOH (pr) -- In an attempt to draw more revenue from the education sector, Europe’s largest media company Bertelsmann has announced the purchase of US based Relias Learning. Bertelsmann’s acquisition of the online training provider is its first major purchase in the United States since 1998 and Thomas Rabe, CEO of Bertelsmann, states that it is “a major step on the way to making the education business a third mainstay of business for Bertelsmann alongside media and services” … read more 21.10.14
Lithuanian university sells historic war buildings
KAUNAS (rtl) -- Former goverment buildings dating back to the inter-war period, owned by Magnus University in Kaunas are being put on the market. The university will use the money to fund facilities with a greater academic benefit and more space for lectures … read more 21.10.14Censorship in British student newspaper
PLYMOUTH (guardian) -- Katie French, the editor of Plymouth University’s student union paper Knowledge, was threatened with expulsion for exposing the university’s budget cuts to student services. The students’ union demanded that she remove the story and on an earlier occasion, as Ms French explains, the university’s communications staff told the journalists to avoid stories “that portrayed the university in a bad light” … read more 21.10.14
Alsatian universities embrace open access
STRASBOURG (letudiant) -- The Alsatian universities of Strasbourg and Mulhouse are preparing the ‘AOC Alsace’ project (Open Archives for Knowledge), which will create institutional ‘open archives’ for Alsatian researchers. AOC, aiming to assemble scientific research within a single accessible portal, will allow articles and manuscripts to be deposited in an open access database … read more 21.10.14
Free photocopying for Italian students… At a price
ROME (il fatto quotidiano) -- Students will now be able to make copies of handouts and notes for free, thanks to a new Rome-based startup company, Fotocopiagratis. The concept is simple: Students sign up to the website, where they will receive a pin that they can bring into participating stores. The downside? In exchange participating sponsors will be able to print their logo on the back of each page. From October 1 the initiative officially started in Rome, but in the next few months it is expected to spread to other Italian cities. “We want to provide a valuable service to students all over the country,” said the founder of the startup, Geremicca Andrea … read more 20.10.2014
Proposal for controlled entry into University of Athens
ATHENS (matrix 24) -- Rector Theodore Fortsakis has proposed that the University of Athens implement stricter security measures, in order to prevent potential student occupation of the university buildings. Proposed security arrangements include the recruitment of private companies, increased patrols and the installation of alarm systems in “sensitive” buildings. The proposals were met with outrage from students, who organised protest rallies in defiance ... read more 20.10.2014
Pro and anti-ISIL students clash at Turkish university

University of Malta collaborates with Communications Authority
VALETTA (malta today) -- In an attempt to support initiatives that boost the Maltese digital economy, the MCA and University of Malta have yesterday agreed on collaboration. The collaboration aims to support initiatives that bridge the gap between research, innovation and entrepreneurship in fields related to communication technologies and their applications. Four research projects were supported financially by the MCA and today the MCA TAKEOFF Award was also launched, for which 40,000 euros will be made available. The University will be hosting the start-ups at its campus-based TAKEOFF incubator. “Collaborating with the University will give the Authority access to knowledge and expertise from a broad spectrum of disciplines” explained Edward Woods, Chairman of the MCA … read more 20.10.201
Universities in Egypt step up security to avoid extremism

Erasmus Plus fails to pay students on time in Latvia

RIGA (apollo) -- Latvian students have reported serious problems with actually receiving the erasmus grants they were promised by their home institution. In a survey conducted by some universities in the country, students reported a substantial delay in the payment of their grant, causing them to suffer financially as a result. The Erasmus + organisation said that the problems arose due to the changes in the scheme having only been made this september and hence administrative procedures delayed the transfer of funds. They also said that universities should now have received all their funds and hence any further transfer delays will be at the fault of the university … read more 21.10.2014
Dominance of elite journals eroding
INTERNATIONAL (sciencemag) -- The dominance of elite journals might soon be a thing of the past. The team that developed Google Scholar have analysed around 160 million scholarly documents and found that elite journals like Science and Nature still come out on top, but lower ranked journals in many fields have been making gains. The egalitarian trend “is a pretty strong phenomenon,” says Vincent Larivière, lead author of the study … read more 14.10.2014
Student fees to rise in Flanders
FLANDERS (acualités) -- Flemish education minister Hilde Crevits has described plans to increase tuition fees to 890 euros in the Belgian city of Flanders, starting in the academic year 2015/2016 … read more 20.10.2014
80,000 on strike in Malaga against university privatisation
MÁLAGA (diario sur) -- The strike by students and teachers in the southern Spanish city Malaga against cuts and downsizing in Education is planned to last three days. Main reason for the protests is the new higher education law, LOMCE in short, and named after education minister José Wert. “The law is a clear attempt to privatise higher education” explained Rubén Fernández, a student representative ... read more 20.10.2014
Polish efforts to reduce brain drain

Belarus to welcome more students from Turkmenistan
MINSK (BelTA) -- Belarus is ready to train more students from Turkmenistan and provide accommodation for them, President Alexander Lukashenko said. Already 9,000 Turkmen students are in the country ... read more 8.10.2014
European scientists rally to protest jobs and funding crisis
INTERNATIONAL (cw) -- A growing number of scientists throughout Europe, frustrated with inadequate funding for research and a lack of jobs, are banding together to demand that policymakers at national and EU levels take action to make science a long-term funding priority. Some scientists are taking to the streets, others published an open letter and a petition, which as of Friday had been signed by nearly 12,000 scientists ... read more 17.10.2014
Thousands of researchers demonstrate in Paris
PARIS (rtl) -- Thousands of scientists gathered on Friday afternoon to protest against the “dramatic situation” within scientific employment and demand more resources for research. The procession headed to the Place Vauban, in the centre of Paris, under a banner proclaiming “Higher Education and Research: Another Policy is Possible!” “Its been 10 years since researchers have taken to the streets”, explained a protester. The collective is supported by a number of trade unions … read more | video20.10.2014
Norway to introduce fees for international students
OSLO (nordic page) -- In next year’s budget, the government of Norway proposes to introduce tuition fees for international students from outside the EU/EEA, despite an overall parliamentary opposition. As a response to the proposal, Norwegian student organisations, students, teachers and others held a demonstration outside the University of Oslo yesterday where even Rector Ole Petter Ottersen participated … read more 20.10.2014
Fees and grants differ hugely across Europe
BRUSSELS (europa.eu) -- Levels of tuition fees, grants and loans in Europe continue to highlight stark differences, according to a new EU report. Fee systems have remained relatively stable across all 33 participating countries, the highest fees were found to be in England ... read more 17.10.2014
Polish nationalists don’t want Ukrainian students
PODKARPACKIE (gazeta) -- Nationalists in the southeastern Polish province of Podkarpackie want to get rid of Ukrainian students – one goal among others they try to achieve through policy making on the local level. They accuse Ukrainian students of corruption to obtain immigration papers and of receiving public funds without contributing to public interest … read more 20.10.14
Universities challenged: The higher education experiment

Nature’s latest issue takes an in depth look at the biggest issue facing universities today, their changing role and structure in a rapidly developing technological age. Within the issue, the synergy between education and research is examined with reference to how this relationship is being forced to rapidly adapt to a changing society. They suggest that the pace of this acceleration has increased substantially in recent times and the university of 2030 is expected to look very different. This unprecedented growth is portrayed with a range of examples from universities all over the world, experimenting with new models for learning, researching and progressing economically ... read more 17.10.14
Campus as a laboratory

Germany: Innovative University At the Technical University of Munich reforms were made, including replacing the universities board with a board of trustees to allow swift decision making, introducing graduate schools as well as private funding programs. This model promotes relaxed government controls and hence more professional academic freedom for growth.
South Korea: ‘flipped classrooms’ In response to the digital age, the flipped classroom model was controversially applied in South Korea, as in other cities, where by students watch online lessons at home and attend university only to discuss the content with peers in a seminar like format, the teachers role is merely that of supervisor.
UK: The social university In the UK the popular Open University took hold of the growing MOOC’s trend, on the basis of the belief that students construct their knowledge through mutual interactions. MOOC’s in this sense put social engagement at the centre of learning by encouraging intense online discussion amongst students about the course content ... read more 17.10.2014
Companies on campus

Arizona's big bet: The research rethink
Arizona State University is trying to reinvent academia by tearing down walls between disciplines. The results underscore how hard it is for large unis, which employ thousands of researchers, to alter their fundamental character by uprooting entrenched academic disciplines ... read more
Embrace big data to educate Europe
AMSTERDAM (euractiv) -- EU leaders underlined the importance of big data for Europe’s economy at their October 2013 summit. A
crucial question is, how big data can help to deliver an education system that enables Europe to realise the full potential of its most valuable and precious resource – its people. Skills must be acquired to harness the power of big data; technologies and infrastructure developed to collect, store, share and analyse it; and policies agreed to address concerns surrounding privacy and security, and the potentially dehumanising impact of big data on education, says Olivier Dumon ... read more 17.10.2014
Jihadist message on Parisian University website
PARIS (fr news) -- The University of Paris have apologised for a Jihadist message that was displayed on their university website. Officials at the university explained the website had been hacked and they were taking the case extremely seriously … read more 16.10.2014Polish science minister calls for ethical vigilance

Danish government freezes out foreign students
COPENHAGEN (dr) -- In an unprecedented move by the Danish government, plans to cut several aspects of the current student structure have seen a drastic decrease in the number of places allocated for foreign students. The government plans will cut hundreds of normal student places and universities, such as the University of Southern Denmark, have stated that this will force them to say no to erasmus students applying to their university in the coming academic years … read more 16.10.14EU students shun Swiss university studies
BERN (thelocal) -- Universities in Western Switzerland have seen a reduction in enrolments by EU students of up to 38 percent compared with the autumn semester last year as a direct result of the “negative effects” of the referendum. Even Switzerland’s two best known universities in Lausanne and Zurich have suffered, the universities in Bern and Basel as well ... read more 16.10.14
Albania welcomes nuclear research
SHKODRA (24ore) -- The Albanian education and sports minister, Lindita Nikolla, has signed an agreement with the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN). This is designed to increase cooperation between Albanian universities and international scientific research institutions … read more 08.14.14
Greek teachers allowed to teach abroad
ATHENS (newsbeast) -- After some debate in the Houses of Parliament, Greek teachers are now legally able to teach at universities abroad. Education minister Andreas Loverdos explained that academics should have this right, as long as the university grant the authorisation … read more 14.10.2014
San Marino university concerned about teacher rankings
SAN MARINO (rtv) -- The University Council in San Marino has voiced concerned about the current method used for ranking teachers in terms of employability. The council suggested that the system does not allow fair distribution of employment among the higher educated teachers and this directly affects the ability of the University of San Marino to provide the highest quality of education at all levels … read more 14.10.2014
‘Hard’ sciences attract French students
PARIS (lemonde) -- French universities are seeing an increase of up to 30 percent in the number of new entrants in scientific subjects and ‘hard’ sciences such as mathematics, physics and chemistry. Isabelle Demachy, vice-president of Paris-Sud, has suggested that this upsurge results from the reform of science programmes within schools: “Sciences are now taught in a more playful manner with concrete examples and by interacting with young people” … read more 08.10.2014
China and Germany vow to boost educational partnership

Serbian philosophers stage protests
BELGRADE (inserbia) -- Students at the Belgrade Faculty of Political Sciences
began protests on Monday night after unsuccessful negotiations with the university’s administration on student co-finance. Almost 200 philosophy students have gathered to block classroom lectures because they say the “faculty is ignoring their requests” … read more 14.14.14
60,000 German students to miss out on student loan
BERLIN (der westen) -- Tens of thousands of German students are at risk of not being eligible for student loans, Kai Gehring a Green Party MP has warned. Since 2010 the funding rates and parental allowances have been frozen in student loans. “This violates equal opportunities massively and is a major setback for pupils and their parents” explained Gehring … read more 08.10.14Russia’s odds of receiving a Nobel Prize ‘approaching zero’
MOSCOW (moscow times) -- Russia’s post-Soviet generation of scientists is suffering from a lack of independence, strategic planning and honest competition, it has been reported. Although science used to be ranked among the state’s top priorities during the Soviet era, these days Russia’s odds of receiving a Nobel Prize are minimal. “Society no longer realises how much it owes to scientists, to engineers, and this has devalued the status of scientists, demotivating them,” explained Russia’s most recent Nobel laureate Konstantin Novoselov … read more 08.10.14
CIS leaders plan greater cooperation
ASTANA (nomad) -- At a meeting of the Russian Commonwealth (CIS), the heads of state discussed key issues of bilateral cooperation in trade, economic and investment spheres. The presidents of Azerbaijan, Armenia, Moldova and Belarus, amongst others, also reviewed greater cooperation in the fields of science, education and youth policy. This culminated in the decision to declare 2016 the Year of Education within the Commonwealth … read more 13.10.2014
NATO and Balkan scientific research cooperation

Commodification of higher education
PARIS (le monde) -- Even though their financial resources are limited, French universities remain reluctant to admit students. Virgil Chassagnon, scientific director at ESDES School of Business and Management, reports that education today has become an object of business and this underlying economic model of Neoliberalism has trapped higher education in a maze of financial capitalism. Mr Chassagnon suggests that France faces a complex equation in the coming years if it is to retain its ability to generate innovation and ensure affordable education. The business model of French universities must be improved by abolishing commercialised education and by reducing the number of over-indebted students … read more 10.10.2014
German stimulus packages demanded
BERLIN (reuters) -- Jeroen Dijsselbloem, president of the Eurogroup, a forum of European finance ministers, has called on Germany to invest more in areas such as digital infrastructure, research, development and education. Mr Dijsselbloem adds his voice to the growing list of critics who see Berlin’s reluctance to launch stimulus measures as unacceptable. “Structural reforms are not something you undertake every 20 years,” he said … read more 13.10.2014
Azerbaijan supports education conference
BAKU (azernews) -- A rare education conference in Baku has received support from the Ministry of Education of the Azerbaijan Republic. The event was open to the public as well as catering to university students, who could take advantage of talking with industry leaders in the Azerbaijan economy. More than 100 participants from 20 countries took part and presented their bachelor and MBA programs … read more 11.10.2014
Belarus lacks academic freedom
MINSK (naviny) -- Experts from the Belarusian Bologna Committee, which aims to break Belarus’ educational isolation from the European Higher Education Area and Bologna Process, claim that the lack of information on Belarusian university websites is indicative of the lack of academic freedom in Belarus’ HE. Belarus currently does not comply with the principles of the Bologna Process, which include academic freedom, institutional autonomy and student participation in HE. Vladimir Dunayev, from the Committee, said that the secrecy of these universities is an obvious obstacle to Belarus’ entry into the Bologna Process … read more 14.10.14
Private universities dying out in Romania
BUCHAREST (voceatransilvaniei) -- Private universities in Romania have been on the decline since 2008, says study. Private institutions in Romania have been struggling for years and it is now expected that most of the accredited universities will be bankrupt by 2020. The study showed that most of them had been operating on a loss since 2008 … read more 14.10.2014Open letters calls for science funding cuts to stop
INTERNATIONAL (sciencemag) -- Prominent science academics from universities across Europe, including Italy, Spain and France, have penned an open letter highlighting drastic budget cuts in science research and accusing their respective government of favouring well established groups and applied research over basic science research, in what they call a ‘systematic destruction of national R&D infrastructure’. Nearly 5000 scientists have signed the letter, which also warns of a brain drain “from the South to the North and from Europe to beyond” … read more 10.10.14
Belgians priced out of education
BRUSSELS (lalibre) -- The rising costs of higher education are blocking access to less advantaged Belgian students. The state scholarship has increased only slightly since the 1980s and the average annual allocation of €1,067 is woefully inadequate when compared to their annual fees, which can be between 7,000 and 12,000 euros … read more 12.10.2014
Federal and state governments come together in Germany

Erasmus mobility - and an international mindset
BRUSSELS(uwn) -- A recent EU study on internationalisation has gained wide attention. Apparently, an international mindset deriving from background and education is as important as mobility … read more 13.10.2014
Austrian universities budgets: definitely maybe
VIENNA (studium) -- Public financing of Austrian universities has remained stable, according to the European University Association (EUA). The question remains - since Austria has seen a staggering 25 percent increase in their student population since 2008 - whether a ‘stable’ response is really sufficient in dealing with the financial burden on universities ... read more 13.10.2014
University of Leuven aims for space travel

LEUVEN (hln) -- Researches from the University of Leuven want to send a billboard into space. They announced their plans to companies who may purchase an advertising square on the billboard for €2,500. The project has been created to raise funds for research into CubeSat, a new satellite technology able to measure climate change … read more 10.10.2014
EU budget cuts reversed
BRUSSELS (europarl) -- The Budgets Committee in the European Parliament has reversed the EU’s Council of Ministers’ proposed budget cuts for 2015. The Council proposed cutting the €146bn budget for 2015 by €522m and the €142bn payments proposal by €2.1bn. The Budgets Committee has instead recommended a sum for commitments of €146.3bn and actual payments amounting to €146.4bn. The Committee also advised adding €190.5 million more for SMEs, research and education, including an additional €24 million for the Erasmus+ programme. The EP will vote on these figures on October 22 … read more 07.10.2014
1,200 academics sign petition against Israel boycott
INTERNATIONAL (times of israel) -- Over 1,200 academics from universities all over the world have signed a petition to protest against the proposed boycott of Israeli academic institutions. The signatories have accused supporters of the BDS (boycotts, divestment, sanctions) of discrimination purely on the grounds of race, after 360 anthropologists proposed sanctions on moral grounds relating to Israel and Palestine … read more 10.10.2014Funding to let Italian research emerge
ROME (ansa) -- An Italian resolution that demands state financing of €3 billion for research over seven years was adopted by the 7th Italian Senate Committee and presented to education minister Stefania Giannini. The document calls for public research funding to increase from 0.52 to 0.7 percent of GPD by 2020 and for the creation of a single fund for the 22 Italian public research institutions. Fabrizio Bocchino, vice-chairman of the Committee, said that with this act, Italian ”public research finally emerges from the shadow to which it has been relegated in recent years” … read more 09.10.2014
Brain drain of Czech medical graduates
PRAGUE (krajskelisty) -- 173 medical school graduates left to work abroad during the last nine months. This accounts for almost 20 percent of all graduates from Czech medical faculties. The Czech Medical Chamber (CLK) has warned that the number of departures is increasing and that “it is certainly wrong, medical faculties produce physicians for export” … read more 9.10.14
New Latvian minister campaigns for teachers and students
RIGA (aprinkis) -- Following his election to parliament, new education minister from the ‘The Heart of Lativa’ party Arvīds Platpers has suggested that education should be at the forefront of the country’s reform. Amongst other policies he is keen to increase teacher salaries and improve the quality of life for those who attend university … read more 08.10.2014
Transparency in Spanish universities improving
MADRID (el confidencial) -- In a study presented by the Consistency and Transparency Foundation, Spain seems to be taking small steps towards better accountability in both public and private universities. The growth was mainly seen in economic data, but the report suggests the trend will increase reputability of Spanish universities in the future … read more 10.10.2014
Young workers look for careers abroad
INTERNATIONAL (le monde) -- A study by the Boston Consulting Group into the global mobility of workers has confirmed that, in most countries, young people aged 21-30 are more mobile than their older compatriots. Those in the medical and social fields appear at the lower end of the scale, with only 50 percent citing willingness to work abroad, compared with 70 percent of engineers and IT professionals ... read more 07.10.14
Polish students leave universities in debt
WARSAW (dzienniklodzki) -- A financial report by Lodz University has revealed that less than 20 percent of Polish students pay for their education. Tuition fees, library fines and other necessary costs unpaid by students amount to €240,000 per month, left to cover by the universities … read more 09.10.14YÖK abolishing itself
ANKARA (dailysabah) -- Gökhan Çetinsaya, president of the Turkish Higher Education Board (YÖK), has said that his organisation should be abolished. Mr Çetinsaya stated that disbanding YÖK, which controls all Turkish universities and according to him has become unworkable as a bureaucratic institution, would allow reform in the Turkish higher education system ... read more 29.09.2014
Orbán’s ‘butler’ rejected as EU commissioner
BRUSSELS (the) -- Members of the European Parliament have rejected the candidacy of Tibor Navracsics to the education, culture, youth and citizenship portfolio.
Mr Navracsics, the former foreign minister and a close political ally to prime minister Viktor Orbán, has been labelled as his ‘butler’ by opposition leaders. Mr Navracsics is the first candidate to be rejected at the hearings. He has been in a right-wing government criticised in the EU for allegedly undermining civil liberties, he has also been held responsible for policies leading to plummeting student numbers in Hungary ... read more 09.10.2014
Boost for graduate programs in Wrocław
WROCLAW (wrocław naszemiasto) -- The Polish science ministry has allocated €40 million for the creation of graduate schemes across education institutions in the city of Wrocław. More than 10 percent of this amount will go to universities in the city. The money will create internship placements for hundreds of students in the fields of translation, law, economics and psychology amongst others. The initiative is centred around students becoming more eligible for top jobs after graduation … read more 08.10.2014
University of Glasgow ditches fossil fuels
GLASGOW (the) -- The University of Glasgow has fully committed itself to “disinvesting from fossil fuel industry companies”. The institution is reportedly the first European university to fully commit to scrapping the non-renewable resources and follows the actions of SOAS, University of London, which previously froze new investments in the fossil fuel industry, although it is yet to commit to full divestment ... read more 08.10.2014
Investment for international profile of Kassel and Giessen
HESSE (hr online) -- The smallest German state of Hesse has chosen to invest €14 million in new buildings at the Universities of Kassel and Giessen. The new 2,400 square kilometre facility will house the fields of architecture, state and agricultural planning, it is hoped that it will increase the international profile of the universities and attract more foreign students … read more 06.10.2014New Islamic university proposed in Istanbul
ANKARA (hurriyet) -- Diyanet, the official Turkish institution for Islamic matters, has announced plans to open an Islamic university in Istanbul. The formal application, made to the Higher Education Board, states that the existing Istanbul 29 Mayıs University would be converted into the International Islamic University … read more 01.10.2014
Students forced underground in Germany

For the EU, education is just a side-product
BRUSSELS (esu) -- The European Students Union is concerned about a new direction of EU education policy. In an organizational chart of the European Commission, the diversity of education is no longer part of a Commissioner’s portfolio but instead referred to as “skills”, ESU chairwoman Elisabeth Gehrke said ... read more | “We also want to express our dismay that tuition fees are being discussed in certain forums where the student and stakeholder voice is being shut out. This is not responsible policy-making and breeds distrust in a time in Europe where that is the last thing we need,” she said ... read more 29.09.14
Northern Irish universities await funding cuts
BELFAST (THE) -- Attempts to cope with the fallout from welfare reforms have forced the Northern Irish government to cut the budgets for Stormont departments including the Department for Employment and Learning (DEL). This has resulted in multimillion pound in-year funding cuts for Northern Irish universities. The University of Ulster has said it will receive £3.15 million less than expected and Queen’s University Belfast faces a £3.9 million shortfall … read more 02.10.2014
MBA market disrupted by global mobility and technology
INTERNATIONAL (bb) -- Citizens of most Asian regions make up the majority of foreign MBA candidates in the US and Canada, while European programs receive their largest share from East and Southeast Asia ... read more
Belgian university president plagiarises speech
BRUSSELS (liberation) -- Alain Delchambre, president of the Free University of Brussels (ULB) has resigned after being caught taking the words from speeches by Jacques Chirac and others. Many have expressed outrage over the case, especially considering the usually severe treatment of plagiarising students at the ULB ... read more 6.10.14
EU research chief candidate passes first test
BRUSSELS (science) -- Carlos Moedas, the commissioner-designate for research, has won over European parliamentarians in a public hearing. A former state secretary in Portugal with no research policy background, Moedas came across as well-prepared—but the plans he presented for his possible 5-year term remain vague, observers say ... read more 03.10.2014
Turkish university staff to influence education reforms

Football league internships for best Romanian students
BUCHAREST (romania libera) -- The Professional Football League has released four merit scholarships for the best students of the national school of political studies. Each scholarship is worth €1,000 and will be available for the highest performing students in the faculty of management. The initiative is the largest of its kind to be offered by a private body of football … read more 07.10.2014Students protest in Serbia

BELGRADE (politika) -- Students at the University of Nis gathered at the central square in protest against the amendment to the law on higher education. The academics requested more exam periods and that current students enrolled from 2010 would be subject to the usual budget regulations. The protesters are expecting immediate resolution and it has been suggested that if this does not happen a joint protest attended by academics across all public universities will be carried out … read more 07.10.2014
Digital studies in Greece increasingly popular
PATRAS (aixmi) -- The Hellenic Open University will welcome thousands of new students in the 2015-2016 academic year. The university is opening its doors to 10,000 more undergraduates and postgraduates at a split of 4790 to 5210 respectively … read more 02.10.2014
7 billion for Hungarian universities debts
BUDAPEST (index) -- Twelve universities in Hungary will receive a total of 7 billion forint (22.6 million euro) to combat their current debt and try to ensure the deficit is not increased again. The plans were announced by the state secretary for higher education, Palkovics László … read more 29.09.2014
Croatian oil company launches entrepreneur initiative

Romanian students complain over escalating fees
BUCHAREST (romanialibera) -- Romanian students will have to pay much more in the coming year as over one third of universities have increased their prices. Many universities additionally charge for the licensing exam. A study by the national student union ANOSR also reveals that there are wide discrepancies between the tuition fees for the same program of study, with courses in medicine differing the most between institutions. This has led to widespread student dissatisfaction and complaint … read more 29.09.2014
Sofia University to become more energy-efficient
SOFIA (dnevnik) -- Sofia University St. Kliment Ohridski will receive 2.8 million lev (1.4 million euro) from the government to carry out essential repairs to campus buildings. The country’s oldest university takes care of nine buildings and 10 other monuments built in the 19th and 20th centuries that urgently need modernisation and improvements in terms of energy-efficiency … read more 01.10.2014
Portuguese education ministry tracks hazing incidents
LISBON (el pais) -- The Portuguese Ministry of Education has opened an electronic mailbox this academic year. The mailbox allows students to submit anonymous allegations of abuse from hazing which the ministry will then act upon … read more 30.09.2014Netherlands: Paradise Lost
THE HAGUE (nrc.nl) -- Dutch graduates have exploited a loophole in student financing that enables them to take gap years and still receive the basic grant, stufi. By registering for an arbitrary course and enrolling before October 1st, they can drop out after a month or even after one day and still receive the grant for the full study period. The loophole — altogether with the basic grant — will be abolished next year … read more 30.09.2014
France invests in ‘super-universities’
PARIS (le figaro) -- Prime minister Manuel Valls has launched a tender for a new wave of French ‘super-universities’ (IDEX). The budget of the new round — a format shaped after the German Exzellenzinitiative during the Sarkozy government in 2009 — has a budget of 3.1 billion euro. Like his predecessor, Valls wants “to foster the emergence of new multidisciplinary centers of excellence for higher education and research on the French territory“ … read more 30.09.2014
Wage increase for Polish lecturers
WARSAW (wiadomosci) -- Polish university lecturers will begin the new academic year with higher salaries, which will be the second increase in the past two years. First, all lecturers will receive a mandatory wage increase. Second, an incentivised or discretionary bonus will be given to outstanding scientists … read more 26.09.2014
Lithuanian transport now discounted for all students
VILINIUS (kauno) -- Current Lithuanian transport regulation allows only full time students to have access to discounted travel. Now, due to the increasing diversity of study, the allowance has been extended to part-time and working students … read more 01.10.2014
German reform increases student subsidies

Denmark: Cap on student numbers, further cuts
COPENHAGEN (folktidende) -- Following the recent cap on the number of student places in Denmark, a huge shortfall in the university budget is expected by Danish rectors. The University of Copenhagen stated this cut could cause them a shortfall of 65 million kroner. Bachelor students are now concerned that they will not receive funding for the graduate or master programmes they are already enrolled in … read more 01.10.2014
Flemish student protest over enrollment fee rise
BRUSSELS (demorgen) -- On October 2, Flemish students were taking to the streets over government plans to increase enrollment fees from currently 620 to 900 or 950 euro. They protest against the wrong concept of students as consumers and the idea of education as an investment. In an open letter, student representatives urge education minister Hilde Crevits to devote herself to quality and fair access in higher education ... read more 02.10.2014
Your first EURES job: EC publishes evaluation report
BRUSSELS (ec) -- The European Commission has published a report evaluating Your first EURES job, a mobility scheme to help young Europeans between 18 and 30 to find a job, traineeship or apprenticeship in other EU countries. One of the results: With the reported 35 percent of the budgets, 55 percent of the targets have been achieved, a strong indicator that there are significant hidden costs ... read more 24.09.2014
Universities controlled by Ukranian militants evacuated

DONETSK (zn.ua) -- The Governor of Donetsk, Sergey Taruta, has announced that higher education establishments under the control of Ukranian militants will be evacuated and all students will be relocated. Taruta said that he wants to free to the city of Donbass of terrorists and this is the way to begin. All relocated students and teachers will receive accommodation and scholarships to ensure as little disruption as possible … read more 01.10.2014
‘Art in public space’ project of 12 Latvian universities
RIGA (lsm) -- The ‘Golden rabbit surrounded by vegetables’ has been unveiled in the botanical gardens of the University of Riga. It is the first exhibit of a joint project between 12 universities to install still life sculptures in urban environments. This project has been initiated by the Latvian cultural foundation Boris and Inara Teterev Fund … read more 29.09.2014
A brand new structure for the European Commission
BRUSSELS (aca) -- President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker announced the composition of his team, who will lead EU policy making for the coming five years. The main change, however, has been the introduction of a completely new structure with seven vice-presidents coordinating project teams composed of groups of Commissioners. Criticisms have already been raised toward Tibor Navracsics ... read more 30.09.2014
European University of Brittany launches digital campus
BREST (letudiant) -- The European University of Brittany has launched the first multi-site, digitally connected campus in Europe. The EUB c@mpus project was selected by the French education ministry in 2008 and aims to connect the 28 EUB institutions within the region by digitally reconciling all training and research sites … read more 30.09.2014
Hazing reaches the Spanish Senate
MADRID (elpais) -- The Spanish Senate is expected to approve the first motion against hazing at universities. This initiative calls on the Spanish government to work with universities, students and parents to prevent a tradition that causes humiliation, threats and maltreatment … read more 30.09.2014
Religious controversy at Parisian university
PARIS (le monde) -- The president of the Parisian Pantheon-Sorbonne University has personally apologised to a student after she was ordered out of her lecture for refusing to remove her Islamic headscarf. According to the student, the lecturer told her to attend a different class after her refusal. Although the French law of 2010 prohibits the wearing of the full face Islamic veil in public (the niqab or burqa), it does not forbid the wearing of the hijab headscarf … read more 25.09.2014
More and more Danish students need private tutors
COPENHAGEN (informationdk) -- One in four Danish students have resorted to private tutoring during their studies, a new study has found. Not only the increased pressure for performance and employability worries the authors of the study, but also the growing gap between who can and who cannot afford higher education in Denmark … read more 29.09.2014
Worries over UCLan Cyprus investment
PYLA (timeshighered) -- In October 2012, the University of Lancashire opened the first British university in Cyprus at a cost of €53 million. It has emerged that the pension fund of Cyprus’ telecommunications provider, Cyta, provided €20 million for the construction of the campus. Cyprus’ auditor general, Odysseas Michaelides, has expressed ‘concerns’ over this investment as Cyta is now at the centre of allegations that their former chairman took kickbacks in a different land deal … read more 25.09.2014
Nature Communications converts to open access
LONDON (timeshighered) -- Nature Communications, a ‘hybrid’ journal that allows authors to choose to pay to make their papers open access, will be the first top-end journal to go fully open access on 20th October. The article processing charge will remain unchanged at £3,150 and the journal will continue to be highly selective, publishing only around 18 percent of submitted papers … read more 25.09.2014
University of Leeds invests in young researchers
LEEDS (timeshighered) -- The University of Leeds is set to launch a recruitment initiative that it hopes will enhance interdisciplinary research and teaching by providing a five-year structured development programme for 250 early career researchers … read more 01.10.2014
Students at Leuven University launch mental health site

Funding for the best universities in Poland
WARSAW (wyborcza) -- In a planned reform for 2015, the Polish Minister for Science and Education has announced the funding for research units and universities will be based on current performance. It is hoped the plans will motivate researchers and academics into focusing more effort on their implementation of research results. The plans also suggest a 10 percent increase in investment into basic research … read more 01.10.2014
4,000 Danish courses with ‘poor job prospects’ to be cut

Google reveals most searched universities
LONDON (bbc) -- Google has revealed the top searches for people looking for universities, and the results reflect worldwide growing interest in online courses. The rankings differ greatly from the traditional map of the global powerhouses of higher education, with the Open University in the UK being the top European university ... read more 24.09.2014UK academics in marking boycott over pensions

‘Silent selection’ abolished in France
PARIS (agoravox) -- French universities have to change the way they select their post graduate students in order to guarantee equal access. This comes after a new court ruling which has abolished hidden requirements known as ‘silent selection’ based on schooling, previous applications and other academic attributes, which 27 universities have been known to use … read more 29.9.14Rise in paying students at Lund University
LUND (sverige radio) -- Despite non-EU students now having to pay for education in Sweden, Lund University has seen a 45 percent increase in overseas students over the last year. However, the majority of those students do not pay the fees themselves, with most receiving scholarships from the Swedish government. “The government has doubled the number of scholarships to aid countries” said Richard Stenelo from the University of Lund. This makes for a more preferable situation for Swedish universities, as it means they get more students from varying backgrounds and not exclusively those who are able to pay the tuition fees ... read more 29.09.2014Malpractice in French student health insurance

Lund University abandons Gazprom
LUND (vk) -- After a student and staff-led “Fossil Free” campaign, the University of Lund has got rid of shares from Russian company Gazprom. The Donation Board has decided to sell the financial assets and instead place them in a Nordic fund. Over 1100 people signed a petition to demand that the university stop investing in businesses linked to coal, oil and natural gas ... read more 26.09.14Norwegian government to pay sick students
OSLO (dagens stadsbladet) -- From next summer, part-time working students in Norway who take sick leave will also have access to a “sick scholarship”. The government proposes to make it possible to combine the sick pay national insurance with medical scholarship from the state educational loan fund Lånekassen, in an attempt to ensure that the students’ income is less affected by illness … read more 29.09.2014
Open Access no threat to publishers
LONDON (timeshighered) -- According to a report by Bernstein Research, unrestricted online access to peer-reviewed academic material “appears to inflict little or no damage on the leading subscription publishers” … read more 27.09.2014
EF Education First launches standardised English exam
INT (pienews) -- EF Education First, an international education company specialising in language training, has announced that it will move into standardised testing by launching the world’s first, free, standardised English exam. This test is desgined to rival the exams of EF’s business competitors, such as IELTS and TOFEL … read more 25.09.2014
€80 million available for young entrepreneurs
BRUSSELS (europa press) -- The European Commission has initiated a programme which offers €80 million to companies using FI-WARE technologies. The FI-WARE accelerator programme invites graduates and young entrepreneurs to create business proposals and ideas using this technology and the most talented candidates will receive up to €150,000 in funding. Any business idea is welcomed by this initiative as the commission hopes to motivate young people in the world of innovation … read more 17.09.2014
University criticism prompts higher education reform
PARIS (uwn) -- After substantial critiscism from universities about lack of resources and the current budget not accommodating a rise in student numbers, the new French higher education minister, Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, along with state secretary for higher education Genevieve Fioraso, have presented their plan to address these concerns. The plans include increased grants for more beneficiaries and government rental guarantees for students … read more 25.09.2014
Last German state to abolish tuition fees
BERLIN (universityworldnews) -- The last German state to still charge tuition fees has finally abolished them to coincide with the start of this academic year. Lower Saxony is the last state to follow suit with the rest of Germany after the defeat of its Christian Democrat rulers last year … read more 23.09.2014Portugal face further education and science cuts
LISBON (parliament mag) -- Following Portugal’s shaky accession to the EU, the country is facing huge economic crisis, for which higher education and science funding will have to take the hit. The government have implemented various public spending cuts, the biggest of which seen in education and science sectors. Higher education cuts of €14 million have already been planned for 2015 … read more 25.09.2014Bertelsmann buys shares of Udacity
GÜTERSLOH (pr) -- The German multinational mass media corporation Bertelsmann has announced that it will be expanding its activities in the education business. The company plans to exploit this fast growing sector by acquiring a stake in the online education provider Udacity. The online vocational training provider Udacity focuses on technology and IT and already has a consumer base of 2.8 million students spread over 119 countries … read more 24.09.2014
Catalonia affords universities more autonomy

BARCELONA (el economista) -- The government of the Autonomous Community of Catalonia has allowed university degrees to last three, rather than four years. The universities will be able to decide based on the subject area, what length the course should be. The Secretary for Universities and Research, Antoni Castellà, explained this would allow universities to have more autonomy ... read more 23.09.14
Students plan protest against loan system in Netherlands
THE HAGUE (Telegraaf) -- A dozen Dutch student organisations have called for protests against plans to change the basic loan system for higher education. The students oppose the government’s decision to introduce the (partial) repayment of tuition fees from next year. Unions and university organisations will also join the demonstration in the capital’s central park Malieveld on November 14 … read more 25.09.14
Portuguese universities internationalise using EU funding

German-Russian university cooperation
BERLIN (TLZ) -- The Technical University of Ilmenau has recently founded its ‘German-Russian Institute of Advanced Technologies’ furthering the academic relationship between Germany and Russia. The university hopes to become the worlds first German-Russian university … read more 25.09.2014Finnish Foundation Day to award cultural ”Grants Now”
HELSINKI (hs.fi) -- On October 1st, Finland will celebrate its first Foundation Day. This celebratory occasion is an opportunity to inform the general public about the contributions that thousands of Finnish foundations make to research, art and culture with their funding. On the day, grants will be awarded by certain institutions for small but bold projects, designed to bring together researchers, artists and other cultural workers to plan new kinds of cross-disciplinary cooperation … read more 14.09.2014
Global universities overhaul economics curriculum
INT (financialtimes) -- In response to students’ complaints that existing economics courses are failing to address global financial issues and that professors are too narrow-minded in their teachings, universities from Europe and beyond are testing a new syllabus from the CORE project. University College London, Sciences Po in Paris and the Central European University in Budapest will be the first in Europe to trial this project … read more 22.09.2014
Oxford University admissions “more transparent”
UK (bbc) -- Mike Nicholson, the outgoing admissions head at Oxford University, has spoken about the Oxford admission process and has rejected preconceptions that “it's exclusive, that there's a trick or technique that allows you to get in”. Mr Nicholson then stated that he has managed to “open up the opportunity for more people to apply who in the past might have thought it wasn't for them . . . there are no backdoors, no private deals and no single person can make the decision to admit a student” … read more 22.09.2014
Southampton University condemns lazy Brazilian scholars
UK (curitiba) -- The University of Southampton has complained to the Science without Borders Programme (SwB) about a lack of commitment from certain Brazilian scholarship holders. The initiative, funded by the Brazilian government, awards Brazilian students with financial support to pursue international studies. The programme has attracted criticism since Brazil does not even demand exam results from scholars in exchange for funding ... read more 25.09.2014
Credits may lose value over time in Netherlands
THE HAGUE (Punt) -- In a letter to parliament, Dutch minister for education, Mariette Bussemaker has stated that module instructors may limit the validity of course credits at their discretion. This means that students who take too long to complete their studies may find that by this time their credits will no longer be recognised. Bussemaker hopes this will increase ambition in students and the quality of education in universities … read more 25.09.2014Czech students go to court for their masters
PRAGUE (denik) -- Bacherlor graduates at the Technical University of Ostrava have threatened court proceedings against the dean of their economics department. Their course, a Master of Journalism in Economics and Law, is the only programme in the country with a focus on these subjects and was cancelled on short-notice at the start of the academic year. Dean Dana Dluhošová has defended her decision stating that the course was terminated due to low student numbers and that this practice is common nationwide … read more 25.09.2014
Salamancan universities announce Twitter campaign against gender-based violence
SALAMANCA (tribuna salamanca) -- The City of Salamanca, in collaboration with the University of Salamanca and the Pontificia University, have joined together to announce for the first time a Twitter campaign aimed at raising awareness about violence against women within Spanish society. The event is aimed at students of the two universities, who are encouraged to tweet with the hashtag #STOPVG in support of the campaign ... read more 23.09.2014Think-tank proposal advocates Belgian selection tests

Online student forum causes plagiarism controversy

Bulgaria aims to increase investment into science
SOFIA (24 chasa) -- An initiative introduced by Bulgarian education ministry will change the face of Latvian higher education. The programme will set out to show current and prospective students which courses will be most financially beneficial for the coming academic year, in order to cater to the needs of the labour market. The programme also hopes to increase state investment into science to 1.5 percent of GDP by 2020 …
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24.09.2014
European and Palestinian masters initiative
SOFIA (topnovini) -- Nine universities are taking part in a joint honours initiative to help reform higher engineering education in Palestine. The cooperation will create an joint masters programme and the partners will provide teacher training and resources to improve the engineering qualification in the Palestinian territories … read more 24.09.2014Unity protest in Ukraine

Greek students flock to Dutch universities
AMSTERDAM (thetoc) -- Over the past seven years, the number of Greek students studying in the Netherlands has quadrupled, from 450 to 2,100. This likely due to the low annual tuition fees for EU citizens which is only 1906 Euro. The most popular courses for Greek students are Financial programmes, Technical Sciences and Social Studies ... read more 22.09.2014
Italian University to extend access to online courses

Sweden ‘blatantly’ violating UNESCO principles
STOCKHOLM (unt.se) -- The Swedish government must confront the growing trend towards political interference within scientific research, claims a new report carried out at Uppsala University. The 1997 UNESCO principles were put in place for member states to ensure scientific independence, but this latest study shows that Swedish research policy is no longer in sync with the international standards prevailing in the region. Of the ten surveyed colleges, almost all opted to dismantle the collegial governance and in many cases self-government is completely abolished ... read more 16.09.2014Study finds EU student exchanges boost employability

Illegality of Italian student housing
ROME (contribuenti) -- In Italy only 24 percent of university students who live offsite have a legal housing contract or lease of the property. This number is down 5 percent from 2013 because more students have taken up contracts ‘in black’ as landlords attempt to dodge property tax … read more 21.09.2014
German-American skills initiative
INT (philly) -- Following the success of dual degree programmes in Germany which combine work with study and in response to German employers unsatisfied with the skill level of their U.S employees, The German Embassy has now introduced a skills initiative which tries to solve this issue. The plan hopes to spread best practices for a sustainable workforce in the USA … read more 18.09.2014New Dutch student loans bill for 2015

Czech companies help solve youth unemployment
PRAGUE (denik) -- Thanks to a business initiative linking businesses in the Czech Republic to universities, some 2,000 graduate jobs and internships will be created by 2016. The alliance is supported by almost 200 companies including confectionary giant Nestle. The Nestle CEO said of the current youth unemployment issue that “the problem cannot only be left to the public sector, the role of businesses is essential” … read more 21.09.2014University of Toulouse III turns away students

Scientists plan march on Paris
PARIS (liberation) -- A group of researchers from the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) are organising a march on Paris. One of them is Patrick Lemaire, CNRS director in Montpellier. The protest comes in aid of further state investment into university research and contractual certainty. The situation in laboratories and institutes, salaries and career prospects of PhDs is now more critical than ever, he said. “Sciences En Marche” is the name of the initiative to walk or cycle, in late September and early October, from different starting points across France to Paris … read more 03.09.2014
Chemical industry engages in Finnish universities
HELSINKI (tekniikkatalous) -- The University of Helsinki has announced that Finnish universities and the chemical industry will begin to forge a long term partnership. Markku Räsänen of the university’s chemistry department, said that the aim was to create a national plan in order to pull resources and stimulate research breakthroughs … read more 19.09.2014University of Ghent resists increase in tuition fees

“Dual degree programmes” on the rise in Germany

ISIS closes or controls universities in Irak
BAGHDAD (al-fanar) -- Eight universities across northern Iraq have been shuttered and appear unlikely to open soon after the sweep of extremist fighters through the region. But even when the Islamic State allows staff back to their jobs, they impose their vision on university curricula and policies, imposing gender segregation, forcing female scholars to cover their faces, abolishing fine art and foreign language departments and cutting European culture and history and similar subjects from coursework ... read more 22.8.14
Ancient Indian University reopens after 800 years

NEW DELHI (the diplomat) -- India’s Nalanda University has reopened after 800 years. The ruins of the old university and the new campus are located near India’s Bihar state close to the northeastern border. The university officials hope the reopening will revive the spirit of cosmopolitan learning that categorised the uni all that time ago … read more 04.09.2014
German universities most popular for Indians
BERLIN (business standard) -- The number of Indian students in Germany has risen by 200 percent to nearly 10,000 since 2008. Unlimited career opportunities are one of the main reasons as the German Parliament has implemented a new unlimited work and residence permit which grants foreign graduates at German universities unrestricted access to the job market. Indian students are also attracted by the heavy state subsidisation of fees and appealing immigration rules … read more 17.09.2014
Lithuanian Post invests in students
VILNIUS (vz.lt) -- The Lithuanian Post company has signed a cooperation agreement with the Gediminas Technical University in Vilnius. This will provide students with managerial and logistical work experience at the firm and a potential career opportunities ... read more 18.09.2014
Foreign students attracted by Hungarian medical degrees
BUDAPEST (romaniainsider) -- In the previous academic year, over 10,000 foreigners registered at universities and colleges in Hungary. Of these students, approximately 1300 undertook medicine degrees. The largest numbers of students arrive from Germany, Slovakia and Romania. Although the annual tuition fees can exceed 3000 Euro, students are drawn to the cheap living costs and the short waiting lists … read more 18.09.2014
Slovakian education minister empowers teachers
BRATISLAVA (topky) -- Slovak education and science minister Peter Pellegrini wants to give teachers the same status as public officials. Following an attack on a teacher, Pellegrini said they need more protection against physical and verbal assaults … read more 18.09.2014
Croatian President advocates university autonomy
SINJ (vecernji) -- Ivo Josipović, the Croatian President, has stated that developments in science and education will be the backbone of a successful Croatia. He specifically referred to the need to strengthen cooperation between scientific instituions in the economy. Josipović also affirmed his desire for more self-regulation within universities and his preference for providing universities with a lump sum financing model … read more 15.09.2014
Digitalisation of Estonian literature and research
TALLINN (arv.postimees) -- The Estonian government has financially supported the development of digitalised repositories. These databases will initially provide students, researchers or other interested parties with a digitalised museum of scientific texts and literature and will later include a wider selection of Estonian intellectual property … read more 14.09.2014Swiss conference advocates vocational training

One third of Greek students will request uni transfer
ATHENS (newsgr) -- Almost 40,000 students have been admitted to regional universities in Greece but it is expected that almost half of these will request a transfer to central universities. These students prefer universities in Athens or Thessaloniki … read more 17.09.14Commuting grant for students and teachers in Romania

EU to support education system in Azerbaijan
BRUSSELS (trend) -- The European Union has launched a new €19 million programme to help improve the quality and relevance of the education system in Azerbaijan. The new programme has a special focus on higher and vocational education and training, on civic participation, governance and inclusiveness. This will also help to make the education system more attractive and contribute to national and international recognition of qualifications, teaching and research in Azerbaijan ... read more 12.09.2014
Housing grant for Greek students studying abroad
ATHENS (news247) -- Following the recent increase in the number of beneficiary students in Greece, the Minister for Education, Andreas Loverdos, has today annouced a €5.5 million addition to the housing budget for students who study abroad. The money will be paid to the families of students who are living away from their permanent residence during the academic year … read more 17.09.2014
Which university courses will earn Spanish students the most money?
MADRID (europa press) -- According to the latest report by Randstad Professionals, those who choose to study Administration and Management, Industrial Engineering or computer careers in Spain are more likely to reap the financial rewards after graduating ... read more 17.09.2014
“Cuts destroying higher education” claims Portuguese student union
LISBON (publico) -- Snesup, Portugal’s national student union, has stated that over the past years teachers have been required to take on bigger class loads, there have been flaws in the maintenance of university facilities and it has been impossible to buy vital equipment needed for research and teaching. These comments come in response to the Portuguese Minister for Education claiming in an interview on Thursday that despite cuts, universities are functioning better than ever ... read more 12.09.2014
Proposed changes to the Italian Maturità
ROME (forexinfo) -- The Italian Education Minister, Stefania Giannini, has announced reforms to the Italian maturity exams. Her policies would both reintroduce internal exam commissioners and abolish the compulsory thesis, which would be replaced by individual projects. Giannini also plans to remove the university entrance tests for medicine, which has prompted resistance … read more 15.09.2014
Juncker’s expectations for education, R&D and skills
BRUSSELS (scienceguide) -- Jean-Claude Juncker surprises at the official presentation of the European Commission. Each member of his team received a letter with personal instructions about what can be expected for education, R&D, skills and employment. Three Eurocommissioners will be responsible for the European knowledge sector. One from Belgium, one from Hungary and one from Portugal ... read more 10.09.2014
Flemish universities in financial trouble
BRUSSELS (de redactie) -- Flemish universities are in dire financial straits, according to a new report. Over the past five years, the number of students has increased by 25 percent, while the operating budget has stayed the same ... read more 12.09.2014
Norway deems international university rankings unfair
OSLO (forskning) -- Norwegian universities consistently score low on international university rankings. Researchers from the independent social sciences institute NIFU in Oslo found both, the THE and the Shanghai ranking, scientifically insufficient. They show, among many other methodological flaws, that the rankings are biased by overwhelming commercial interest ... read more 10.09.2014
Serbian efforts to contain brain drain
BELGRADE (inserbia) -- In an attempt to draw young Serbian experts back home, the Serbian parliament has accelerated the recognition of foreign education diplomas ... read more 10.09.2014
Regional German education minister resigns
KIEL (fr) -- Following allegations of corruption, the science minister for the German state Schleswig-Holstein, Waltraud Wende, has resigned from her post. In August, the former university president was the target of investigations by the public prosecutor because the University of Flensburg had offered her the option to return if she resigned... read more 15.09.2014
Political animal for EU-education
BRUSSELS (scienceguide) -- The new EU-Commissioner for Skills, Youth and Multilingualism will be a Belgian powerhouse, Marianne Thyssen. She will bring lots of local and EU-experience, leadership qualities and her presidency of the EP Beer-club to the education-portfolio in Brussels. As the chairperson of the Belgian representatives in the EPP party she became one of the most influential people within the EP. She was active in the committee on monetary and economic affairs and on environmental, health and food safety issues ... read more 05.09.2014
Nine deaths after student initiation ceremonies in Portugal
LISBON (metro msn) -- In the past year, nine students have died from hazing at Portuguese universities. The education ministry has now directly contacted students to warn them against these dangerous archaic initiation rituals involving harassment, abuse or humiliation ... read more 14.9.14Turkish education ministry violates civil rights
ANKARA (todays zaman) -- The Turkish Ministry of Education has excluded some private schools from government incentives without any justification. This move by the Erdoğan government comes in the wake of previous discrimination against the Hizmet movement, which is inspired by the Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen. “By discouraging students from attending Hizmet-affiliated private schools ... the government is engaging in unlawful practices,” said Seyit Mehmet, the vice president of the Active Educators’ Union ... read more 14.09.2014
Crimean students protest Russian integration
SIMFEROPOL (kyivpost) -- Students at Crimea’s medical university have protested against Russian plans to combine five colleges into one federal university on the Peninsula ... read more 11.09.2014
University of Bologna sells historic buildings
BOLOGNA (il fatto) -- In an unprecedented move, the University of Bologna has put nine historic buildings up for sale, in order to fund a new university campus. Among the buildings for sale is Palazzo Malvezzi Campeggi in the old town. The new campus is to be built on 93,000 square meters of a former military factory site. “Bologna is practically redesigning the city structure,” a spokesman said ... read more 13.09.2014
EU court gives German unis power to grant student visas

Austrian universities need 1 billion euro
VIENNA (heute) -- The rectors of 21 Austrian universities suffer from massive underfunding. According to Heinrich Schmidinger, president of the university association uniko, to cover growing costs and student numbers, additional 1 billion euro will be necessary between 2016 and 2018 ... read more 9.9.14French State enters housing market

Second £60m graphene centre at University of Manchester
MANCHESTER (bbc) -- The University of Manchester is to build a £60m (€75 million) Graphene Engineering Innovation Centre (GEIC). The facility will be critical in the development of commercial applications and in maintaining the UK’s world-leading position in the “wonder-material” graphene and related 2-D materials ... read more | and here 11.09.2014Religion stifles economic progression

New Czech Higher Education law empowers rectors
PRAGUE (zpravy idnes) -- The Czech education minister, Marcel Chládek, has revealed an amendment to the country’s Higher Education Act. If approved, rectors will be able to remove titles from deceitful students, the activities of foreign educational institutes within the Czech territory will become regulated and the social scholarship will rise. Previous attempts to reform the education sector have triggered student and teacher protests and this proposal has itself come under criticism ... read more 04.09.2014
Swiss made: Out with the old
BERN (bund) -- Plans by the University of Elfenau in Bern to purchase a retirement residence in order to transform it into student accommodation, has met with opposition from current residents ... read more08.09.2014
World Higher Education Database (WHED) launched
PARIS (iau) -- The International Association of Universities is pleased to announce the official launch of the World Higher Education Database (WHED) Portal, the most comprehensive reference tool on higher education systems, degrees and institutions worldwide ... read more 01.09.2014
Is business education out-dated?
INTERNATIONAL (forbes) -- Dr. Emad Rahim argues that universities do not provide students with adequate education for the entrepreneurial world and offers 10 recommendations ... read more 10.09.2014Žižek on self-plagiarism: What is the big deal?
LJUBLJANA (news week) -- Earlier this month, the New York Times complained about Slavoj Žižek re-using his work. The witty Slovenian philosopher shrugged his shoulders suggesting the newspaper should invest in plagiarism detection software, if it is so insistent about only publishing original material ... read more
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