Robert Reich reminds us of the path to wealth in the US thanks to tried and trusted graduate pathways from Harvard and other elite colleges into Finance and Hedge Funds:
More than a third of Harvard’s graduating seniors are heading into finance or management consulting – two professions notable for how quickly their practitioners “make a bag”, or make money, reports the New York Times.
I recently learned that CUHK Shenzhen can charge about 50 K USD per year per student and that Xi-an Jiaotong Liverpool can charge about 70 K USD per year. These might seem very and yet they are on a par with premier universities in the US. It seems Chinese parents see price as a sign of quality and they would not want in any other way.
Faute de budget pour embaucher des titulaires dans un enseignement supérieur exsangue, plus de la moitié des personnels enseignants sont désormais des vacataires, auxquels s’ajoutent de nombreux contractuels. Reportage à l’université de Grenoble.
Dependence on Tech caused staggering Educational inequality
AI can bring a third digital divide in terms of educational inequality: where the rich have access to technology, increasingly powered by artificial intelligence, and to teachers to help them use this technology as part of their learning, while poor kids just have access to the technology?
GRADE INFLATION: 9 out of 10 students in top universities get firsts or 2.1 degrees
New research shows that it doesn’t really matter what you do in university. What matters is getting in to the top universities. This is the hard part. If you get in you have a 90% chance of getting a first or a 2.1 degree.
Education is no longer the key factor when it comes to social mobility in Ireland. Family wealth and inheritance play the most significant role when it comes to social mobility and home ownership.
Wellcome Trust study aims to use peer-delivered problem solving and behavioural activation – two strategies found to help improve symptoms of mental health problems – as standalone early interventions for young people with depression.
CASUALISING ACADEMICS: the new buzz phrase for the future of academic life
As more and more universities and colleges try and cope with the fallout from the Coronavirus Pandemic, lecturers and junior staff fear for their academic futures. While universities are eager to get more and more high achieving PhD and research students into their departments, very often the lecturers that teach and inspire them are slowly being shown the back door.
A recent OECD report asks universities not to “casuals” academics:
One wonders how this is related to the pandemic. Colleges and universities with huge deficits like Savannah College must be wondering whether it is viable to maintain large physical campuses with exorbitant rents.
Nicholas Kristoff argues there is liberal privilege in academia with one report finding that only 2% of English professors in the US are supporters of the Republican Party.