Source: Alamy
Here today. Here tomorrow.
Our Head of Campus Security, Brigadier T.âW. Trouncing, has praised the University of Sunderland and the University of Ulster for what he describes as âtheir brave initiativeâ in introducing fingerprinting as a way of monitoring the physical presence of international students at lectures.
Speaking to our reporter, Keith Ponting (30), Trouncing described international students as âa mixed blessingâ. While on the one hand their fees âwere more than welcomeâ, the constant possibility that they might âwander off campus and become dangerous terroristsâ was always something âone had at the back of oneâs mindâ.
It was for this reason, Trouncing explained, that Poppleton had recently decided to implement a âmarginally more efficient methodâ of ensuring that such students were not allowed âto roam freelyâ.
However, Trouncing flatly denied claims that this new method â the fitting of a relatively small ball and moderately sized chain to the ankles of all international students â was in any way an overreaction. He went on to describe complaints about the chafing caused by the new devices as âthe type of whingeing weâve come to expect from the civil liberties wallahsâ.
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Speaking frankly
Our vice-chancellor has openly declared his support for the recent assertion by Steve West, the vice-chancellor of the University of the West of England, that vice-chancellors should become more of âan independent force for positive social changeâ.
When questioned by reporter Keith Ponting (30), our vice-chancellor readily agreed that in common with every other vice-chancellor in the country he had largely kept quiet about such aspects of present government policy as lumbering students with unpayable debts, licensing more and more private for-profit universities, measuring universities solely in terms of their market value to students, substituting managerial control for academic decision-making, devaluing teaching through over-concentration on duplicitous assessments of research output, and generally destroying what was once regarded as the leading system of higher education in the civilised world. However, in the wake of Professor Westâs injunction, he was now prepared to say without any regard to the consequences that in his considered view David Willetts, the universities and science minister, looks âjust a teeny bit less intelligent since he stopped wearing his spectaclesâ.
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Yesterdayâs man
âHeâs very much a yesterdayâs man.â
That was the term used this week by Brian Bryan, our Deputy Head of REF Strategy, to describe Sir Peter Swinnerton-Dyer, whose former posts have included vice-chancellor of the University of Cambridge, chairman of the University Grants Committee and chief executive of the Universities Funding Council.
Although Mr Bryan allowed that Sir Peter had enjoyed a brilliant academic and administrative career and had been critical in developing research assessment, he thought that much of this distinction had been fatally undermined by Sir Peterâs description of the introduction of âimpactâ into the research excellence framework as a âlicence for lyingâ.
Mr Bryan regarded this characterisation as âa deeply disturbing slurâ on the work of the several dozen people from the respected world of public relations who had been employed by Poppleton University to detect âimpactâ in places where no one had previously believed it to exist.
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Thought for the week
(contributed by Jennifer Doubleday, Head of Personal Development)
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âIâm so sorry but the gremlins have been at work again and are responsible for the word âtwerkingâ in the title of this weekâs seminar. This should, of course, have read âThe Communicative Power of Tweetingâ.â(Please note that this seminar is already over-subscribed.)
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