Friday, August 29, 2008

How much does an Olympic medal cost?


If you've watched the Olympics you've probably heard the big noise Britain has been making regarding their medals: at Atlanta in 1996 they managed to win only 1 medal, fast forward 12 years and they've won 47 medals, landing the top 4th country in terms of overall medal standing compared to SA's 71th place on the medals list.

But these medals came at a price ...

Yahoo Finance published an interesting article on What a gold medal is really worth:
  • More than £190 million was allocated to the UK's Olympic team and with 19 Golds and 47 medals in total it works out to almost £10 million per Gold and just under £4 million per medal
  • The most expensive medal is in Athletics at £20 million per Gold
  • The cheapest was in Cycling costing just over £2 million per Gold
  • Six sports come in at less than £5m per medal
It makes you wonder how much Team SA was allocated ...

click image to enlarge

Thursday, August 28, 2008

A (humorous ) look at how you spend your time




So, how do you spend your time?

University News from the West

Image Copyright by merla
IHEs Spend Lots Of Money On The Wrong Things If colleges were spending most of their money on initiatives that improve the quality of education for students, you might regard price hikes running at two to four times the rate of inflation as a necessary evil. But spending on palatial dorms, state-of-the-art fitness centers and a panoply of gourmet dining options? Maybe not. Colleges could help ease the pressure by adopting cost-containment practices that are standard in private business. But most schools are nonprofits. And without the pressure to produce earnings, they have little incentive to slash expenses or improve productivity. Says Ron Ehrenberg, an economics professor at Cornell University and author of "Tuition Rising": "For nonprofits the goal is to raise all the money you can, then spend it."

Campuses Going Green But Less So In The Curriculum
The National Wildlife Federation (NWF) released its own ratings of American colleges and universities — based not on selectivity, but on greenness. The results are a bit surprising. For all the attention that environmental causes have garnered over the past several years, the NWF found that sustainability-related education offered on campuses stayed steady between 2001 and 2008 — and might even have declined. While U.S. schools have done well in greening their campuses — rare is the day that passes without a college announcing a new green building or program for energy efficiency — colleges are lacking when it comes to sustainable education.


India Plans New Accreditation Body for Colleges of Business and EngineeringIndia plans to create a separate accreditation body for engineering and business colleges in response to complaints that the current situation, in which the same panel serves as regulator and accreditor, is open to corruption and fails to ensure academic quality, the higher-education secretary told an industry lobbying group last week, according to the business newspaper Mint.

Federal Spending on Academic Research Continued Downward Trend in 2007 Washington — Total spending on academic scientific research grew slightly in 2007 even as the the subtotal financed by the federal government fell, after inflation was factored in, according to a new report. Colleges and other providers made up the difference from their own pockets — but they weren’t happy about it. The federal government is the largest source of funds for academic research, and the 2007 fiscal year represented the second straight year of decline after inflation, according to the report, which was issued by the National Science Foundation. The federal total was $30.44-billion, a net drop of 1.6 percent compared with 2006. Such a two-year decline had never before occurred since the NSF began tracking those figures, in 1972.




Cleaning up the act By Tariq Tahir Academic fraud in Britain is endemic, but universities continue to argue the case for self-regulation. America and Denmark have tougher regimes in place, so should we follow their lead?

Oiling the learning machine By John Gill The huge expansion of higher education in the Gulf offers major opportunities for UK academe. But there are also challenges




Next Steps for E-Texts With slew of new announcements and partnerships, some publishers, colleges and even bookstores seem poised to offer e-textbooks as a serious alternative for students. more

'Collision Course' for Graduate Education At political science meeting, experts on Ph.D. education consider how to give grad students more breadth and better teaching skills -- while also getting them to finish dissertations on time.

Should American Politics Be Abolished (as a Field)?
Political scientists debate whether one of the discipline's traditional specializations has outlived its purpose and is hindering good research and teaching.

When IM Is the Best Way to Stay on Top
At Ivy Tech Community College, a system serving more than 115,000 students on 23 campuses, faculty members embrace instant messaging to maintain contact with their students




The real Shanghai Jiao Tong winners

How many Americans does it take to produce a university? No, it's not an academic joke, it's a population-based analysis of the recently published 2008 Academic Ranking of World Universities by China’s Shanghai Jiao Tong University. The study shows that while the US might have the most top 500 universities in the world, it is not the most efficient producer of such universities on a population basis. That title goes to Sweden and the analysis also demonstrates that Scandinavia in general is a veritable powerhouse of academic excellence given its population base

DENMARK: Academics sign up to protest
Danish academics are collecting signatures to convince Science Minister Helge Sander that opposition to the current education law is, in their words, "no sectarian craving from a dissatisfied minority...but has a broad basis of support among Danish students and researchers".

US: New Stanford study of dual-career academic couples
Dual-career issues are growing in importance in higher education in America. More than 70% of faculty are in dual-career relationships, and more than a third are partnered with another academic, according to a study just published by Stanford University's Clayman Institute for Gender Research. The publication, Dual-Career Academic Couples: What universities need to know, is based on a survey of full-time tenured and tenure-track academics at 13 leading US universities, as well as interviews with administrators at 18 universities. The lead author is Londa Schiebinger, director of the Clayman Institute and Professor of the History of Science. The report is freely available.


INDIA: Poor pay discourages researchers
Increased job opportunities and fat pay packets for young graduates are turning out to be a bane for academic research in India.

Monday, August 25, 2008

Searching this blog

Looking for a blog entry, but can’t find it on the first page and not sure of how to go about searching for it ?

The easiest way is to use the Search function that is part of this blog – in the top left corner you will see a search box. Use this box to type the word or concept that you are looking for and click on Search Blog

For example if you are looking for the blog entry on accreditation and how you can search for accredited journals – type in the word accreditation at the top.

You will be taken straight to all the blog entries with that word


Alternatively you can also browse the blog using the Archive function. The Archive option is in the right side of the blog towards the very bottom of the blog. Click on a date to see all the entries

New issue of Peer Review out

Peer Review provides a quarterly briefing on emerging trends and key debates in undergraduate education. Each issue is focused on a specific topic, provides comprehensive analysis, and features campus perspectives.

The new Spring/Summer edition will cover Student Political Engagement and examine how the academy engages students in their learning today to help them grow as engaged citizens for tomorrow. It focuses on democratic civic engagement rather than service and in what some call civic agency. (This issue will be out soon on our Databases)

Some of the past topics covered are:

Academic Advising Winter 2008
This issue addresses the role of academic advising in undergraduate education with a special focus on general education goals and the documentation of the achievement of student learning outcomes.

Faculty Development: Finding Balance in Changing Roles Fall 2007
Faculty development will play a critical role in efforts to achieve essential learning outcomes for all students. This issue features the key challenges and pressures facing faculty members and institutions as they work to orient new faculty and build the skills of existing faculty.

Bringing Theory to Practice Summer 2007
The Bringing Theory to Practice (BTtoP) project seeks to advance engaged student learning and determine how it might improve the quality of students' education, development, health, and commitment to civic engagement. This issue provides a brief project overview as well as several campus examples that offer specific forms of engaged learning and how they are contributing to students' health and well-being.

Assessing Student Learning Spring 2007
As campuses implement more complex assignments, community placements, internships, student research programs, and other engaged learning practices, the opportunity for students to demonstrate complex capacities will be increased. This issue addresses a variety of approaches to achieving and assessing the advanced learning outcomes derived from these practices. It includes a special focus on developing and assessing capstone courses.

Learning and Technology Fall 2006
This issue examines a range of current issues concerning the role and use of technology in student learning and also addresses how these technologies can advance liberal education learning outcomes. Topics addressed include using technology to advance humanistic ideals, teaching through blended learning environment, engaging faculty in a technological age, and learning through the deployment of innovative technologies in informal spaces.

Manufacturing production capacity stats

Manufacturing: Utilisation of production capacity by large enterprises is now available as an economic time series on StatsOnline.


Here is how to access it:

  1. Click "Interactive data" and then "Time series data".
  2. The data are available in ASCII and Excel format as well as interactive data in PX-Web.
  3. This time series data have been on StatsOnline up to February 2003, but have been discontinued since.
  4. The new time series runs from November 2003 to date.

The National Land Transport Bill

The Department of Transport briefed the Parliamentary Monitoring Group for Transport on the institutional changes recommended for the National Land Transport Bill [B51-2008], following discussions with the Department of Provincial and Local Government.

Three new definitions were outlined, and a new clause 11, clearly specifying the responsibilities of each of the three spheres of government, as well as the assignments, was tabled.

Members discussed the current system of bus subsidies, but felt that provinces should have a more significant role and that more subsidies needed to go to rural areas. There were concerns around the assignment provisions, which Members pointed out could be influenced by power play and personalities, but it was stressed that the route of assignment was the only route to follow, short of changing the Constitution.

Members enquired about agencies and municipal entities, the merits of devolving, the need to plan routes, the need to have more clarity on the funding, the wide definition for special categories, whether scholar transport was included, and clarity on unfunded mandates, especially in metros, and the transport funds. However, they cautioned that the wording used should not transform this into a money bill. Members were asked to study the submission about inter-modal integration received by the Committee.

Gearing up for the Paralympic Games

The Paralympic Games in Beijing starts on the 6th of September and promises to be just as exciting as the Olympic Games that just ended.

Teams will be competing in 20 sports including judo, swimming, wheelchair basketball, volleyball sitting, cycling, athletics and archery.

With less than two weeks to go we wish our athletes all the best!

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