Exciting news – it’s fantasy uni time
The Telegraph and Sunday Times both carry this most interesting of stories about the establishment of the ‘New College of the Humanities’. The Guardian also has the story but includes reactions from those expressing some consternation at the proposition as well as the key piece of information that the degrees will be awarded by the University of London.
The Telegraph reports that the College will charge £18,000 a year and that for this princely sum students will enjoy a range of benefits:
”Our priorities at the College will be excellent teaching quality, excellent ratios of teachers to students, and a strongly supportive and responsive learning environment.
”Our students will be challenged to develop as skilled, informed and reflective thinkers, and will receive an education to match that aspiration.”
The college claims to offer a ”new model of higher education for the humanities in the UK” and will prepare undergraduates for degrees in Law, Economics and humanities subjects including History, Philosophy and English literature.
Students will also take three ”intellectual skills” modules in science literacy, logic and critical thinking and applied ethics.
Practical professional skills to prepare them for the world of work including financial literacy, teamwork, presentation and strategy will also be taught.
And the staff will largely be star academics (Grayling, Ferguson, Dawkins, Pinker to name just the back four), motivated it seems by the desire to bring more high quality education to the UK HE sector and to improve society.
College chiefs say students will receive a ”best in class education”, with one-to-one tutorials, more than 12 contact hours a week and a 10/1 student to teacher ratio.
Prof Grayling said that budget cuts and dwindling resources are likely to limit both quantity and quality of teaching in the UK, leaving the fabric of society poorer as a result.
But there are a few questions here:
- Will anyone sign up at these prices?
- Will students be eligible for any public financial support?
- Who are the “College chiefs” quoted above?
- What does the logo look like?
- Will a ‘BA Hons (London) DNC’ award be embraced by employers?
- Did they test out the model using Virtual-U (it really does exist) before launching?
- And, most importantly, who is doing all the administration here? Or are they dividing it up amongst themselves?
Whichever way you look at it, it’s certainly a different approach to the challenges facing UK higher education. And it does create an entirely new game – fantasy uni league – where you too can put together your own team of top academics to deliver an Oxbridge-rivalling student experience (but perhaps best to do the dry run using Virtual-U beforehand).
Oh, I lost a whole weekend to Virtual U once! Sad bastard that I am.
Great post on this at Crooked Timber http://crookedtimber.org/2011/06/06/if-youre-an-egalitarian-how-come-youre-trying-to-sell-an-undergraduate-arts-degree-that-costs-more-than-an-mba/ but as far as the admin staff are concerned, they are on the College’s website http://www.nchum.org/who-we-are/non-academic-staff
Somebody – posting to the Guardian web-site, I think – summed the enterprise up by saying that it is an expensive crammer for University of London degrees (external). A friend of mine, who has a London degree taken through the external route, tells me that there are already excellent materials available in any case.
Yes, that is exactly what it is. And not even in their list of recognised institutions…
http://www.londoninternational.ac.uk/onlinesearch/search.do