Thursday, October 2, 2008

SA fifteen year on

Almost halfway through South Africa’s second decade of freedom, government is taking stock of how far it has gone in achieving the objective of improving the quality of life of all South Africans in their report Towards a Fifteen Year Review .

The review brings particular focus to the past five years, building on conclusions of Towards a Ten Year Review, published in 2003.

The 2008 review aims to answer 3 question:
  1. To what extent has the Government achieved its policy objectives?
  2. Are these the appropriate policy objectives?
  3. What have the past five years brought in terms of progress towards these objectives?.

The themes covered are:

  • Governance
  • Social sector
  • Economic
  • Justice, crime prevention and security
  • International relations, peace and security
  • Targeted groups
  • Major transversal post-2004 initiatives

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Transport month is here!

Copyright: winjohn

Today marks the start of Transport Month.

To celebrate the launch Transport Minister Jeff Radebe spoke about the Gautrain and its impact on commuters traveling between Johannesburg and Pretoria, this route has over 300 000 vehicles on it per day (of which my green car happen to be one), growing at an estimated 7 percent per annum!

  • Gautrain will save 585 000 vehicle km per day
  • Lower traffic congestion will result in travel cost savings of all vehicles in Gauteng of 3 cents per km
  • Total accident cost savings will be R475 million per annum
  • Gautrain will save R3.8 billion per year in vehicle operating costs by the year 2030
  • Gautrain will save R7.1 billion per annum in time costs for passengers travelling in this corridor by 2030

The City of Cape Town is also celebrating with various initiatives:

  • Park-and-Ride facility in the Helderberg area which will be in operation by mid-October. It will offer commuters safe parking with easy access to the new express bus service that will be introduced by Golden Arrow Bus Services on the existing route to Cape Town.
  • This service in conjunction with the dedicated Bus and Minibus Taxi (BMT) Lane, will significantly reduce traffic volumes on the N2 Highway with the hope that people from the Helderberg will make use of the service.
  • The newly completed Claremont Public Transport interchange and boulevard will also officially open later this month.
  • In an effort to highlight the city's commitment to the use of non-motorised transport, the city will further host a bicycle ride in Goodwood.
  • Officials will hand out protective weekly and monthly ticket key ring holders to commuters to publicise the 24 hour toll free transport Call Centre.
  • The Roads Traffic Management Corporation will organise the second International Accident and Reconstruction Conference at the Grand West Entertainment Centre from 27 to 30 October

In KZN, things are happening as well:

  • The theme for the month is: Transport Infrastructure - creating a lasting legacy 2010 and beyond and will be used to showcase transport infrastructure readiness in preparation for the 2010 FIFA World Cup.
  • Transport month approach will further advance government's commitment to improve public transport systems as our legacy for 2010 and beyond.

University news from the West


The long and the short of it
Britain's one-year masters is proving a sticking point in the Bologna Process, but the equivalence issue is raising difficult questions about length of study for other degrees, too.


Lecturers fear anti-terror laws
Academics instruct students not to download sensitive material


Pass the exam hall to enter Dragons’ Den
Innovative assessment techniques are being used to challenge students.


REF could penalise those working across disciplines
Study says interdisciplinary researchers might lose out as their work is less cited



In Study Abroad, Dispute Over Roaming
Students and parents sue cell phone provider popular among study abroad participants, alleging unfair billing practices

Understanding Students Who Were 'Born Digital'
Authors of a new book talk about technology in the classroom, digital literacy and changes in the library.


Trickle-Down Economic Duress
Months of national fiscal strain have had little direct impact on colleges so far. As liquidity crisis intensifies, a few signs of actual distress begin to emerge in higher education.


Border-Crossing Universities
Europe is seeing new models for foreign institutions. In Britain, a Malaysian university opens to serve immigrant students.


US: Poor students miss out in some universities
A new study by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, has found that selective institutions in America differ markedly in the number of low-income students they admit. John Douglass and Gregg Thomson investigated the divide between poor and rich students, comparing a group of selective institutions and their number and percentage of Pell Grant recipients.

UK: Widening participation debate heats up
Diane Spencer
The debate on widening participation in Britain's universities heated up last week with the publication of a report on special schemes to encourage pupils from poorer backgrounds to enter higher education, and inflammatory remarks by the Chancellor of Oxford University. Lord (Chris) Patten told a conference of independent school heads that his university should not be treated "like a social security office" to help disadvantaged pupils from state schools.

ROMANIA: Investment boost for higher education
Karen MacGregor
Higher education in Romania has undergone huge changes in the past two decades, from a small and stifled sector during the communist era to a competitive system with seven times more students, more than 100 institutions and burgeoning research. There are challenges, including raising quality, but investment in higher education has increased 30-fold in the past seven years, says Professor Paul Serban Agachi, president of the academic council of Babes-Bolyai University and a member of a team that crafted reforms

JAPAN: University crime experts on call
Gavin Blair
The second article in a special series on how universities are helping fight crime.Though the number of academic specialists in commercial crime in the Asia-Pacific region may be fewer than in the US or Europe, many of the leading figures are willing to work with corporate clients and have a great deal of experience outside the ivory towers.


FRANCE: Higher education and research are budget priorities
Jane Marshall
Higher education and research are the government's chief priority in the 2009 budget. Next year's allocation will rise by EUR1.8 billion (US$2.57 billion) to a total of EUR24.16 billion, up 6.5% compared with 2008. But the sector has not escaped 900 job cuts although these are proportionally less severe than those imposed on other ministries.

UK: Teacher gender gap widens
Diane Spencer
Despite government efforts to attract men into teaching, the latest figures show the gender gap is widening. The Higher Education Statistics Agency found that males made up less than a quarter of all teaching qualifications obtained from higher education institutions in 2006-07, the lowest number for five years.

EUROPE: Young scientists promise a bright future
Alan Osborn
Three young researchers, from Poland, Slovakia and Britain, were awarded the top prizes in the EU Contest for Young Scientists in Copenhagen on 25 September, against competition from national scientific prize-winners from 39 European countries plus Brazil, Canada, China, Mexico, New Zealand and the US.


Economic Crisis Rapidly Changes MBA Education steven bell
Business schools are responding with counseling, classroom analysis, curriculum changes, and case studies to the convulsions that have led to the bankruptcy or fire sales of leading US financial firms and a federal bailout. At schools that have long funneled graduating MBAs to Wall Street, professors are teaching about the crisis, even as their students ponder what it will mean for their careers. Many longtime faculty members and administrators say they have never seen a series of events with greater potential to transform the focus of business education - and the career trajectories of their students. Read more at:

iTunes University Lets IHEs Spread Their Messages steven bell
To keep up with the growing presence of all things online, universities are now aiming to reach students, prospective students, and anyone else with a love of learning through a forum that is both popular and recognizable. In other words, they're looking to iTunes. Conceived as a collaboration between Apple and various universities in 2004, iTunes U launched in the spring of 2006. The site, which began with only 16 institutions, has ballooned in recent months as more schools join up to post their content. Usage, too, is growing quickly.


Researchers Say Partial Lecture Notes Are Better For Students Than Full Notes steven bell
Course management software programs make it especially easy for instructors to provide students with a set of complete lecture notes. It seems that more instructors are doing this, as witnessed in the regularity with which students ask that the instructor’s notes be posted. But is giving students a complete set of notes a good idea? Based on their findings, these researchers recommend providing students with partial notes.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

You’re Invited to the SCIP Women’s CI and Leadership Symposium


Connect with your competitive intelligence peers at the SCIP Women’s Leadership and CI Symposium, an invitation-only experience, that promises to enthrall and inform through exciting speakers and sessions tailored to the professional CI woman.

Cost: $695 for members, $895 for non-members
When: Nov. 13-14
Where: Crowne Plaza, Chicago, Ill.
Deadline for registration: November 11, 2008.

The symposium will encourage an open exchange of thoughts and professional development through education sessions, panel discussions, and social interaction.

Invited guests will hear distinguished keynote speakers:
  • Jenny Fisher, vice president of executive leadership at Motorola, will provide her perspective on dealing with senior management and maintaining or expanding your department in lean times.
  • Ava Youngblood, president and CEO of Youngblood Executive Search, former manager of CI in the Corporate Strategy division of Amoco, and former SCIP president, will speak about finding good employees and evaluating CI talent.

The symposium will encourage an open exchange of thoughts and professional development through education sessions, panel discussions, and social interaction. Content for this highly interactive symposium include:

  • Managing Senior Management Expectations
  • Ways to Maintain or increase your department in lean times
  • leadership issues in competitive intelligence
  • Demonstrating CI Value in the Organization
  • How to position CI within your company
  • How to demonstrate leadership within your organization
  • How to build and grow the CI function
  • Demonstrating CI Value in the organization
  • The future of CI
  • Cutting edge tools and techniques
  • Cooperative intelligence

If you do plan on going dress warmly! Chicago drops to -19C in November and rarely rises to more than 10C.

Korea - SA - ICT

Copyright: Rotorhead



A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed recently by the Department of Communications and the Republic of Korea's Ministry of Public Administration and Security is to pave the way for the establishment of an Information Communication Technologies Co-operation Centre (ITCC).



In a statement, the department said the MoU would formalize the Korean Government's commitment to contribute R8-million over the next three years towards the establishment of an ITCC in South Africa.

The purpose of the ITCC would be, amongst other things, to promote the exchange of complementary experiences of the two respective countries for the mutual development of the ITCC. The MoU would create the much needed Information Communication Technology cadres whose role would be to advance the cause of Information Technology Communications.





The department said the two deputy ministers identified that areas for cooperation were the operation of an e-skills training center, the implementation of e-government and development of e-government related skills.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Frye Leadership Institute accepting program nominees for 2009

The Frye Leadership Institute is designed to develop the next generation of higher education leaders emerging from IT and library backgrounds.

Frye helps participants develop:
  • Habits of mind that help them think strategically and communicate clearly with diverse audiences
  • A broad perspective on higher education, its values, issues, and challenges
  • Confidence in their ability to address complex issues
  • A strong network of colleagues and friends

From May 31 to June 11, 2009, participants will gather at Emory University for an intensive residential experience that exposes them to higher education leaders and luminaries from around the country. A significant amount of personal and professional growth results from the networking and group exercises that bring a diverse set of international participants together to share, explore, and learn. Presentations are intermixed with case studies, brainstorming, role-playing, problem solving, and reflection

Nominations for the 2009 Program Are Due November 14

The selection process is highly competitive. Applicants must first be nominated by a senior institutional officer.

StatsSA - new account launched & get the detail on the Household survey



Tourism Satellite Account Launch

Stats SA is releaseing the first experimental Tourism Satellite Account (TSA) for South Africa in March 2009. To mark the birth of the first experimental TSA for South Africa, StatsOnline invites you to register your interest in this publication. In return for your registration, we will send you the first release at embargo to your email box. Click here to register.
General Household Survey (GHS) 2007
The data and metadata for the General Household Survey (GHS) 2007 are now available on CD. To order please contact:Joan Lindeque at 012 3108619.

The data and metadata is also available on StatsOnline. Click "Interactive data" and then "Explore micro data".

Statkon closing dates

Copyright: lusi
STATKON has announced the following closing dates:

Submission of new data sets
Friday, 31 October 2008, 14:00.

New requests on existing data
Friday, 7 November 2008

Assistance with research and questionnaire design
27 November 2008

STATKON will re-open:
Monday, 19 January 2009 for assistance with research and questionnaire design, as well as acceptance of new data sets, and on Monday, 2 February 2009 for data analysis.

African online archive in the pipeline

Sabinet is trying to establish a digital archive of journals that have been published in Africa.

The archive will contain retrospective content with the aim of digitizing where possible, back to the first issue. The collection must be useful to researchers, scholars, professionals and anyone interested in accessing core African journal literature.

They are conducting a survey regarding the content of the archive. Please assist them by filling in the online survey and suggest topics and journals that you would like to see in such an archive


Closing date for the survey: 10th October 2008.

New Architecture/Building databases

Two new architecture databases are available on Sabinet:

ArchUP
The material from ArchUP comes from 93 different Architectural journals, which include 20,000 records.

Articles indexed over the years enable users to access information on architects, buildings, building materials and methods, design theory, urban design, and much more.

The coverage is from early 1970 through August 2008. New records will be loaded monthly.

PlanUP
PlanUP includes over 3,000 records, describing the building, architect and location.
PlanUP was developed for the indexing of the extended archive of the Department of Architecture at UP. Donations of the work of some of South Africa's major architects were accumulated over the years.

The database includes diverse research reports, articles, frameworks, sketches and photographs, original hand-drawn plans, elevations, sections, and diaries. New records will be loaded monthly.

Cover Wars

The American Society of Magazine Editors has released their finalist for the Cover of the Year award, here are a few of the finalists:


With the PICA awards coming up this year (keep 21 November open) the AMSE's is a nice warm-up.


The PICA's has not been without controversy this year as The Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC) has suspended seven of Media24's women's magazines. They are: True Love Babe, InStyle SA, True Love, Lééf, Fairlady, SARIE and True Love Bride. Apparently TrueLove Babe and InStyle SA inflated their ABC's by almost 50 percent!

Best Global Brands 2008

Interbrand has released their Best Brands for 2008 report recently and here is what the Top 10 looks like:
  1. Ranked 1st in 2007, brand value +- $m 66,667
  2. Ranked 3rd in 2007, brand value +- $m 59,031
  3. Ranked 2nd in 2007, brand value +- $m 59,007
  4. Ranked 4th in 2007, brand value +- $m 53,086
  5. Ranked 5th in 2007, brand value +- $m 35,942
  6. Ranked 6th in 2007, brand value +- $m 34,050
  7. Ranked 7th in 2007, brand value +- $m 31,261
  8. Ranked 8th in 2007, brand value +- $m 31,049
  9. Ranked 9th in 2007, brand value +- $m 29,251
  10. Ranked 20th in 2007, brand value +- $m 25,590

Here is what you can expect from the rest of the report:

  • Guest contributor Harvard Business School Professor Nancy Koehn speaks out
    on managing brands
  • The six laws of collaborative branding by Jason Baer - A guide to understanding the new era of branding in a consumer driven world
  • Sustainability and its impact on brand value by Paula Oliveira and Andrea Sullivan -Can organizations structure their green, or sustainability, initiatives to produce value growth for the brand?
  • The Red Thread by Jez Frampton - Putting the brand at core of the business becomes a uniting force behind everything you do and say to drive value
  • Taking action: acting like a brand leader by Graham Hales - Practical steps for acting, behaving, and managing like a brand leader
  • Interbrand’s method for valuing the 2008 Best Global Brands - Understanding our method and approach to looking at brands through a financial lens
  • Profiles of the 2008 best global brands and industry insights - A snapshot of the top 100 global brands and insight into what’s driving growth in each industry
  • The business purpose for brand valuation by Nik Stucky - A look at how we understand brands as business assets, and how brand value is a barometer for a healthy business
  • The impact of risk on brand value by Jean-Baptiste Danet and Valérie Herdlicka - Brands create shareholder value and should be managed to mitigate risk of decreasing value
  • The future of future-proofing brand investments by Greg Silverman - How will we measure the unobservable and make informed brand investment?
  • Planning your touchpoints to accelerate profit by Rune Gustafson - Understanding brand as a central organizing principle requires the management of every touchpoint to build the experience for consumers
  • Building brands in emerging markets by interbrand’s leaders in Brazil, China, India, and Russia Aléjandro Pinedo, Nicola Stanisch, Iain Ellwood, and Jonathan Chajet talk about the challenges and opportunities to build brands in developing economies
  • Brands create nations by JÜrgen Häusler - A look at the association between nations and their brands
  • The luxury kingdom by Manfredi Ricca - Understanding the laws ruling the luxury market
  • It’s what on the inside that counts by Stephanie Colton and Carolyn Ray - An employee’s engagement with the brand means the difference between satisfied customers and bottom-line results
  • The value of creativity by Andy Payne - A creative director’s point of view on the value of brands

University news from Africa

AFRICA: Unesco conference discusses quality assurance Jane Marshall
How to achieve the Millennium Development Goals through higher education and how to improve the quality of higher education in Africa came under discussion in Dakar this month. Delegates gathered in the Senegalese capital for the Third International Conference on Quality Assurance in Higher Education in Africa, organised by the Unesco Bamako Cluster Office and Unesco's regional bureau for education Africa (Breda).



NIGERIA: Panic grips students in illegal universities Tunde Fatunde
The National Universities Commission of Nigeria recently published a list of 31 'illegal' universities - including offshore campuses of foreign universities - that it has not approved, prompting panic in the affected institutions. Students face a bleak future if their qualifications are not recognised, teachers are no longer sure of their jobs while governing councils fear being prosecuted and have been lobbying key people in the legislative and executive arms of Nigeria's 36 states to have their universities recognised and accredited.

NIGERIA: Clipping the wings of degree mills Peter Okebukola
Nigerian higher education system, which has 297 institutions (universities, polytechnics and colleges of education) and enrols more than 3.5 million students, is the most expansive in Africa. Highly respected in the past, the system is now sadly paled - among other quality-depressing factors by activities of degree mills.



ZIMBABWE: Academics and students doubt power deal Clemence Manyukwe
Academics and students in Zimbabwe have greeted a political power-sharing deal struck earlier this month with caution. Students see little chance of the settlement between long-ruling Zanu-PF party and the rival Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) succeeding, mainly owing to mistrust of autocratic President Robert Mugabe. But lecturers hope it will deliver academic freedom and a return of donors who cut support as oppression deepened.



ZAMBIA: University offers free Aids treatment Clemence Manyukwe
The University of Zambia is offering anti-retroviral treatment to students and staff free of charge to reduce the impact of the HIV-Aids pandemic on the African country's oldest institution of higher learning and the skilled graduates it produces.



SENEGAL: Anti-brain drain computing grid installed
Cheikh Anta Diop University (UCAD) in Dakar is the first university in sub-Saharan Africa to benefit from installation of a computing grid under the Reversing Brain Drain into Brain Gain for Africa project jointly run by Unesco, Hewlett-Packard and the CNRS, France's national scientific research centre. The new infrastructure will make it easier for researchers at the university to collaborate with colleagues abroad, and give them access to considerable information technology resources.



ANGOLA: Launch of 'knowledge and research' portal
The Ministry of Science and Technology has launched a 'knowledge and research' portal, accessible to the public, on which postgraduate works may be logged, researchers can contact one another, and academic and scientific information will be published.

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