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Challenging the Academy
May 2010
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Class Warriors
William Ayers
Professor William Ayers, banned last year from speaking at the University of Nebraska, argues that the current trend towards “academic capitalism” gives faculty the moment to speak up – and act up. MORE>
Higher Education or Education for Hire? Corporatization and the Threat to Democratic Thinking
Joel Westheimer
Teaching critical thinking is the university’s democratic mission, argues the University of Ottawa’s Joel Westheimer, and today’s universities are failing to deliver. Universities need to reverse the trend that has them focusing on workforce preparation and the commercialization of knowledge and resurrect higher education’s public purpose.  MORE>
The University: Punctuated by Paradox
Simon Marginson
Old/new, engaged/separate, public/private, elite/mass-oriented, national/global. But for universities, Simon Marginson argues, paradox is vital.  MORE>
The Queer Agenda on Campus: Invisible? Stalled? Incomplete?
David Rayside
For universities to become truly inclusive, sexual orientation and gender identity have to be fully incorporated into the employment equity agenda, argues the University of Toronto’s David Rayside. MORE>
Acting Out of Character in the Immortal Profession: Toward a Free Trait Agreement
Brian R. Little
Sometimes, the academic life demands that faculty deny their fundamental personality traits. But if collegial respect includes allowing colleagues the latitude to nurture their true characters, academics can survive and thrive amidst the challenges of academic life. MORE>
An Academic Life: Peter Dale Scott
David MacGregor
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Humour Matters – Sabbatical Time
Steve Penfold
In an odd and unpredictable way, the Olympics saved my first sabbatical. I mean, I had great plans for my first sabbatical. No lectures to churn out, no essays to mark, no exams to set, no emails to return – just time to think, read, and write. But it wasn’t going to be all work. No sir. I figured it would be long lunches, real coffee breaks (you know, where you actually take a break!), walks in the afternoon, and even the occasional nap. Sabbatical would be like an adult version of daycare and, if anything went wrong, I could just go to the quiet area for a time out. MORE>
Editorial Matters – The road ahead
Mark Rosenfeld
A university cancels a public lecture by an outspoken academic due to political pressure. A job offer at a prestigious research institute is rescinded in response to the opposition of a large, corporate sponsor. Police arrest demonstrators at a debate on one the flashpoints of regional geo-politics. A decision with far-reaching academic implications is taken with only perfunctory reference to collegial governance. A university’s strategic plan uses the corporate sector as a model, with the aim of maximizing growth, marketability and profit. MORE>
Blogs
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Art and Science of Teaching
A Blog by Ken Cramer, James Côté Neil McLaughlin, and Tetyana Antimirova

Academic disengagement: International comparisons
by: Jim Côté
posted on: 6/18/2010
 

A common reaction to reports of student disengagement is that we all should get used to widespread disengagement because nothing better should be expected from a mass university system. A variety of excuses are made for students who are ‘too busy’ to put a full effort into their studies.

One way to approach this ‘inevitability question’ is to ask whether the levels of student disengagement observed in Canada and the US are also found in massified systems in other countries. To answer this question, we can look at data from some European studies that have measured students’ time use out of class in a comparable way to the NSSE studies.[i] These data come from the Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) in the Oxford, England.[ii]

The HEPI studies, conducted in 2006, 2007, and 2009, found that students in England spent on average about 13 hours per week on ‘private study:’ reading for classes and completing assignments.[iii] When added to an average of about 14 hours of class time, the total amount of time spent on their studies was just over 26 hours, comparable to what Canadian and American students spend according to the NSSE studies—the equivalent of a part-time job.

Study time was also examined in terms of variations among and within universities, with the finding that these averages ranged from under 15 hours per week to over 45 hours at different universities. When different types of programmes were examined, it appears that the least effort is put into the liberal arts programmes like humanities and social sciences (total time commitments of about 20 hours per week) and the most into professional/vocational programmes like medicine and engineering (over 35 hours per week).

However, when compared to other European countries, English students spend on average 15 per cent less time on their studies out of class. When time spent in class was added with time preparing for class, students in France spent almost 40 hours per week. Other countries topping 35 hours per week—the equivalent of a full-time job—were Norway, Italy, Germany, Spain, and Switzerland.[iv]

After presenting the results for English universities and summarizing these comparisons with other European countries, Bahram Bekhradnia, the HEPI Director, voiced his frustration at how policymakers in the England were ignoring these findings, especially the questions raised ‘about the possible variation in standards between subjects and universities, and about what it means to have a degree from an English university.’[v] Bekhradnia continued by making the following observations:

If it is possible to earn a degree in, say, history in one university after studying for just 20 hours a week whereas a student in a different university studying history is required to put in 30 hours each week, then it is reasonable to assume that the student in the latter will, all other things being equal, achieve a higher standard. That is not of course necessarily so. It could be that the former university has found a magic bullet that enables students to achieve the same high standards as a student at the latter – or it could be that the latter is more inefficient than the former. That at least is a matter for investigation and explanation, and so far there has been no apparent inclination on the part of those concerned to investigate whether that is so, and if not, what the implications are for standards in our universities. At the extreme, of course, this may simply be an indication that what students study, and how much they learn, is not the most important thing while they are at university and that the three or four years they spend there are more important for other reasons. If that is the case too, that is something that is worth investigating and concluding on the basis of evidence. What is not acceptable is simply to ignore the issue.

With respect to the unfavourable comparisons of English universities with some continental ones, Bekhradnia concludes ‘that students in England appear to devote less time to their studies than students elsewhere in Europe – and that therefore a degree in England can apparently be obtained with less effort than elsewhere.’ Given the prospect that English universities ‘are not very demanding of their students’[vi]—a prospect also faced in Canada and the US—Bekhradnia contends the following:

It is inconvenient for us now also to have to demonstrate how students in this country achieve outcomes equivalent to those in other countries with very different amounts of effort, even within their shorter [3-year] degree courses. It is quite plausible that they might do so, but if the issue is simply ignored, as it has been so far, the presumption will be that degrees in this country are more easily available in some universities and in some subjects than elsewhere in Europe, and that on average our degree standards are lower.

On the positive side, it does appear that some English universities are attending to these problems, but on a negative side, just as in Canada, in England ‘the response of the national bodies and those that represent universities collectively has been disappointingly defensive.’ Still, the press in England picked up the story, making note of the gender differences, suggesting ‘boys are down the pub and the girls are in the library,’ as well as the now obvious conclusion that many ‘students are enrolled full-time but studying part-time.’[vii]

Based on these international comparisons, therefore, it appears that disengagement is not an inevitable result of massification, although it is a distinct possibility if stewards of the system are not watchful.

********

PS. This my last posting for the summer. Meanwhile, the sequel to  Ivory Tower Blues  is now in production and should be available by year’s end. It is titled  Lowering Higher Education: Pseudo-Vocationalism in Canadian Universities.

********


[i] The question asked in the HEPI studies was worded as follows: ‘In an average week during term-time, roughly how many hours have you spent on private study? Please include time spent reading, researching, writing essays and reports, doing unsupervised laboratory work etc.’ (Tom Sastry and Bahram Bekhradnia, The Academic Experience of Students in English Universities, Higher Education Policy Institute, September 2007, http://www.hepi.ac.uk/466/Reports.html (accessed 18 Dec. 2009), 30.

 

[ii] See also the report Eurostudent 2005 Social And Economic Conditions Of Student Life, for results from a project coordinated by HIS Hochschul-Informations-System, Hannover 2005, Germany, http://www.his.de/Eurostudent/report2005.pdf (accessed 18 Dec. 2009).

[iii] Bahram Bekhradnia, The Academic Experience of Students in English Universities 2009 Report, Higher Education Policy Institute, September 2007, http://www.hepi.ac.uk/466/Reports.html (accessed 18 Dec. 2009).

[iv] Bekhradnia, The Academic Experience of Students in English Universities 2009 Report, 7. The Eurostudent 2005estimates are a bit lower for European countries, with most recording between 30 to 35 hours per week, and a high of 41 hours for Portugal (pp. 132-133). These differing stimates among studies are likely due to question wording.

[v] Bekhradnia, The Academic Experience of Students in English Universities 2009 Report, 6.

[vi] Ibid., 8.

[vii] BBC NEWS, ‘Students in England ‘Work Less’,’ http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/education/7011121.stm (accessed 19 Dec. 2009). Males put in an average of 11.7 hours per week in private study, while females put in 13.3 (Sastry and Bekhradnia, The Academic Experience of Students in English Universities, 9.

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About Dr. Ken Cramer
Dr. Ken Cramer is a full professor at the University of Windsor in the Department of Psychology. While teaching several large classes of introductory psychology, Dr. Cramer's research interests include teaching technologies, effective engagement of students through active learning, and the impact of Maclean's rankings on student welfare.
 
About James Côté
James Côté is a full professor of Sociology at the University of Western Ontario, where he has taught since the early 1980s. In addition to Ivory Tower Blues: A University System in Crisis, which he co-authored with Anton Allahar, he has also published numerous journal articles on student experiences with higher education. His research interests overlapping with higher education include the sociology of youth (Critical Youth Studies, Pearson Education, 2006), and the social psychology of identity (Identity Formation, Agency, and Culture, Lawrence Erlbaum, 2002). These interests dovetail in a critique of contemporary culture where forms of human development are arrested or misdirected by special interests and outmoded institutions that undermine both people’s potentials to reach their full developmental capacities and the democratic potentials for the society as a whole.
 
About Neil McLaughlin
Neil McLaughlin is an associate professor of sociology at McMaster University, where he teaches sociological theory and writes on the sociology of intellectuals, ideas and knowledge. He has published cases studies on the German critical theorist Erich Fromm, the American sociologist David Riesman, the literary critic Edward Said, the essayist novelist George Orwell and the financial speculator George Soros. He has also written on the history of the Frankfurt School, op-ed and book writing among academics in Canada, comparative questions regarding "public sociology" and the institutional history and health of Canadian sociology.
 
About Tetyana Antimirova
Dr. Tetyana Antimirova is an Assistant Professor and a current Assistant Chair for Undergraduate Studies at the Department of Physics at Ryerson University. Her current interests include Physics Education Research, Curriculum Development, Science Education and Outreach. Her current work is focused on the impact of technology (clickers, real-time data acquisition using probeware, video-based motion analysis, tablet PC, computer simulations, etc.) on students’ learning in undergraduate physics courses. She also studies the gender effect and the impact of high school physics experience on the learning outcomes in the university introductory physics courses. Tetyana credits her interest in physics and her career choice to her high school teachers.