The week in higher education ÔÇô 23 January 2020
The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media
The seemingly unstoppable rise in the share of students leaving UK universities with a first-class degree has finally stalled. According to data released by the Higher Education Statistics Agency, 28 per cent of graduates achieved a first in 2018-19, the same proportion as the year before. That news, however, did not stop education secretary Gavin Williamson from lamenting how top grades remained at an “all-time high”, thereby enabling the customary round of “end grade inflation” stories that appear in mid-January. He later told journalists that he wanted universities to “reverse” grade inflation, which, given the intense political pressure on this issue for several years, is probably not that unlikely in the coming years.
University of Southampton students had some surprising news when they opened an email purporting to be from their vice-chancellor, informing them of his supposed recent phone call with Boris Johnson: “Unfortunately due to budget constraints and the pressure Brexit is placing on the economy the government has taken the decision to close six universities.” Issues of institutional autonomy aside, this was towards the more credible end of the spectrum as bogus emails go. Southampton would be “the first to close with immediate effect”, the bombshell message continued. As The Tab reported, it added that all students “will be rehoused at a far superior university. You will all be transferred to Solent University for the next semester.” The author – whom Southampton pledged to track down in order to administer “appropriate action” – not only showed a keen grasp of the poisonous status hierarchies within English higher education, but inadvertently satirised the profile and impact of the university’s senior management by claiming to be Sir Christopher Snowden. Sir Christopher stepped down as vice-chancellor in spring 2019 and was replaced by Mark Smith.
When auditors at Drexel University in Philadelphia looked into unreceipted expenses claims lodged by Chikaodinaka Nwankpa, then head of its electrical engineering department, they found that nearly half of his spending had been at weekends, “and most of it between midnight and 2am at venues including Club Risque and Cheerleaders”. These establishments, the auditors suspected, were not bona fide providers of electrical engineering research expertise. The matter has escalated somewhat, with Philadelphia prosecutors now accusing Professor Nwankpa of “spending $96,000 [£73,924] in federal grant funds at adult entertainment venues and sports bars between 2010 and 2017”, as well as having “squandered $89,000 – funding he had secured for science, energy, and naval research – on iTunes purchases and meals”, ThePhiladelphia Inquirer reported. Professor Nwankpa “admitted the unauthorised expenses when confronted by university officials”, resigned his post and offered to pay back around a third of the money, the newspaper said.
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