Quote from the article:
The union is entitled to be wary of private sector involvement, but it looks as though it has chosen the wrong target for an active campaign. This is not privatisation as most people would understand it. The universities remain in control of admissions and are not handing assets over to private firms. It would be a shame if opposition to change resulted in universities losing out on important opportunities.
Thursday, 31 May 2007
The Independent
News articles of interest to the higher education languages, linguistics and area studies.
Thursday, 31 May 2007
Tuesday, 29 May 2007
'I am the mum and I can't help my children'
Immigrant women are dismayed at cuts in the English language classes that are their lifeline. Mira Katbamna reports
Tuesday May 29, 2007
The Guardian
Tuesday May 29, 2007
The Guardian
Joint project builds Eastern European expertise
Article about the collaborative Centre for Russian, Central and Eastern European Studies.
Friday, 25 May 2007, p. 56
Times Higher Education Supplement (subsciption required online).
Friday, 25 May 2007, p. 56
Times Higher Education Supplement (subsciption required online).
Wednesday, 23 May 2007
Why we're still Brits Abroad
Ginny McGrath laments the behaviour of British people abroad, including their failure to even try to speak in a foreign language.
Wednesday, 23rd May 2007
The Times
Wednesday, 23rd May 2007
The Times
Friday, 18 May 2007
Chinese writing '8,000 years old'
Chinese archaeologists studying ancient rock carvings say they have evidence that modern Chinese script is thousands of years older than previously thought.
Friday, 18th May 2007
BBC website
Friday, 18th May 2007
BBC website
Johnson takes vocational message to European ministers
The education secretary, Alan Johnson, today put UK reforms around widening participation and promoting more vocational degrees to create graduates fit for the workplace on to the European agenda.
Debbie Andalo
Thursday May 17, 2007
EducationGuardian.co.uk
Debbie Andalo
Thursday May 17, 2007
EducationGuardian.co.uk
Thursday, 17 May 2007
Languages Lacking
Professor Dick Hudson of University College London tells a British Academy discussion that a lack of research into language learning is to blame for low numbers of school pupils studying languages.
Friday 18 May 2007, p. 4
Times Higher Education Supplement (subscription required)
Friday 18 May 2007, p. 4
Times Higher Education Supplement (subscription required)
Thursday, 10 May 2007
Routes into languages: Who got that cash?
Who got that cash?
Anthea Lipsett
Published: 11 May 2007
It took a consortium of three different organisations and some serious persuasion to secure the Routes into Languages programme's £4.5 million grant from the Higher Education Funding Council for England to bolster language study in the UK.
The programme, which is run by the national languages subject centre at Southampton University with the University Council of Modern Languages and the National Centre for Languages, is made up of outreach work in schools and three research projects
Friday, 11th May 2007
Times Higher Education Supplement (subscription required), p.52
Anthea Lipsett
Published: 11 May 2007
It took a consortium of three different organisations and some serious persuasion to secure the Routes into Languages programme's £4.5 million grant from the Higher Education Funding Council for England to bolster language study in the UK.
The programme, which is run by the national languages subject centre at Southampton University with the University Council of Modern Languages and the National Centre for Languages, is made up of outreach work in schools and three research projects
Friday, 11th May 2007
Times Higher Education Supplement (subscription required), p.52
How do I become... a lexicographer?
Lexicographers have a fascination with words, although an ability to look at language analytically is a must
Emily Ford
Thursday, 10th May 2007
The Times
Emily Ford
Thursday, 10th May 2007
The Times
1. Press release: Routes into Languages announces regional consortia members
Press release, 8 May 2007
Four innovative regional consortia have been selected to increase the take up of languages in their area. They will focus particularly on encouraging students to continue studying languages in school and then at university.
The funding for the three-year consortium projects comes through Routes into Languages, a 4.5 million programme funded by the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE), in partnership with the Higher Education Academy (HEA) Subject Centre for Languages, Linguistics and Area Studies, with the University Council of Modern Languages, and CILT, the National Centre for Languages. The Routes into Languages programme is coordinated by a team at the University of Southampton, directed by Professor Michael Kelly.
Professor Kelly comments: "We have been astonished at the imaginative ideas and the innovative activities that are proposed. The consortia will build on a lot of experience, and we expect they will produce a real 'sea change' in attitudes to language learning around the country."
Full details available on LLAS website
Four innovative regional consortia have been selected to increase the take up of languages in their area. They will focus particularly on encouraging students to continue studying languages in school and then at university.
The funding for the three-year consortium projects comes through Routes into Languages, a 4.5 million programme funded by the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE), in partnership with the Higher Education Academy (HEA) Subject Centre for Languages, Linguistics and Area Studies, with the University Council of Modern Languages, and CILT, the National Centre for Languages. The Routes into Languages programme is coordinated by a team at the University of Southampton, directed by Professor Michael Kelly.
Professor Kelly comments: "We have been astonished at the imaginative ideas and the innovative activities that are proposed. The consortia will build on a lot of experience, and we expect they will produce a real 'sea change' in attitudes to language learning around the country."
Full details available on LLAS website
Harvard introduces teaching reforms
Are universities neglecting teaching? Many critics think so. And now even Harvard is introducing reform.
Lucy Hodges
Thursday, 10 May 2007
The Independent
Lucy Hodges
Thursday, 10 May 2007
The Independent
Friday, 4 May 2007
Thousands join exodus from state education
Nearly 40,000 more children are now being educated privately than when Tony Blair came to power, new figures reveal today
The article cites provision of modern languages as one of the reasons for this trend.
Saturday, 4th May 2007
The Times
The article cites provision of modern languages as one of the reasons for this trend.
Saturday, 4th May 2007
The Times
Thursday, 3 May 2007
Ulster-Scots phone not used once
A special government voicemail service for phone calls from Ulster-Scots speakers has not been used once in more than three years.
Thursday, 3 May 2007
BBC website
Thursday, 3 May 2007
BBC website
Tuesday, 1 May 2007
Getting closer by degrees
The Bologna Process aims to standardise university courses across Europe. Is that to be welcomed? Jessica Shepherd reports
Tuesday May 1, 2007
The Guardian
Tuesday May 1, 2007
The Guardian
Wales watching
There is a part of the UK where languages aren't in freefall and bilingualism is the norm, says Diane Hofkins
Tuesday May 1, 2007
The Guardian
Tuesday May 1, 2007
The Guardian