/education

  • Harvard professors defend president amid calls to resign after statements on antisemitism | Harvard University | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2023/dec/11/harvard-professors-defend-president-claudine-gay

    At least 570 professors at Harvard have defended the university’s embattled president, Claudine Gay, as she faces calls to resign following statements on campus antisemitism that have already triggered the resignation of the University of Pennsylvania president.

    The faculty submitted a petition to the 13-member Harvard Corporation, which has the authority to fire the president, asking it not to bend to political pressure to remove her.

  • UK university staff back strikes over pay and conditions

    Vote will add to disruption this winter after previous ballot for industrial action over pensions

    Disruption at UK universities is set to widen this winter after staff backed strikes over pay and working conditions, joining colleagues who voted for strikes over pensions earlier this week.

    A total of 58 institutions have now supported strike ballots, and they may be joined by others after the University and College Union (UCU) said it was looking at reballoting in branches that only narrowly failed to back industrial action – including Newcastle, where turnout was just a single ballot below the 50% required by law.

    The ballot on pay announced on Friday, which had a slightly more than 50% turnout by UCU members, resulted in 70% backing strikes and 85% voting for action short of strike, which could include a marking boycott.

    The UCU general secretary, Jo Grady, said: “We truly hope that disruption can be avoided – that is what staff and students alike all want. But this is entirely in the gift of employers who simply need to end their attacks on pensions, pay and working conditions and finally demonstrate they value their staff.”

    While 37 institutions voted for strikes over pensions in the first ballot, more supported action over pay and conditions, including two of the UK’s largest campus universities: University College London and the University of Manchester. Staff at the Open University, the UK’s largest university, backed strikes over pay and pensions.

    UCU is calling for a £2,500 increase for all staff, an end to pay discrimination, the elimination of zero-hours and other casual contracts, and moves to tackle unmanageable workloads.

    Representing employers, the Universities and Colleges Employers Association (UCEA) claimed that the 50% turnout among members would be “disappointing” for the union.

    “It is clear that the great majority of the 325,000 colleagues in UK HE institutions covered by the collective negotiations on the base pay uplift understand the financial realities for their institutions,” the UCEA said in a statement.

    In late 2019, UCU staff at 60 universities initially went on strike. That swelled to 74 institutions in a second wave of strikes that began in February 2020, as part of a dispute that was overtaken by the Covid outbreak in March.

    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2021/nov/05/uk-university-staff-back-strike-over-pay-and-conditions?CMP=Share_iOSAp

    #université #Angleterre #UK #grève #résistance #universités

    –-

    En 2020 :
    Outre Manche 74 universités entrent en grève en février et en mars
    https://seenthis.net/messages/824269

    –----
    Ajouté à la métaliste sur les résistances dans le monde universitaire en Europe :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/824281

    ping @_kg_

  • ‘My students never knew’: the lecturer who lived in a tent

    Higher education is one of the most casualised sectors of the UK economy, and for many it means a struggle to get by

    Like many PhD students, #Aimée_Lê needed her hourly paid job – as an English lecturer – to stay afloat. But what her students never guessed was that for two years while she taught them she was living in a tent.

    Lê decided to live outside as a last resort when she was faced with a steep rent increase in the third year of her PhD at Royal Holloway, University of London, and realised she would not be able to afford a flat and cover all her costs on her research and teaching income.

    She recalls: “It was cold. It was a small one-person tent, which meant after a bit it did get warmer. But there were days when I remember waking up and my tent was in a circle of snow. When I wasn’t doing my PhD or other work I was learning how to chop wood or start a fire.”

    She stored her books in the postgraduate office so they wouldn’t be damaged, and showered at university. She “didn’t quite tell” her parents, saying to them that she was staying on an ecological farm so as not to worry them.

    Nor did she tell her university, which insisted this week that the welfare of all its students was paramount and that it encouraged anyone struggling to reach out for support. Lê says she led a double life, fearful that it might damage her professional reputation if people knew she was homeless.

    “I got good reviews from students. I marked 300 GCSEs in a hotel lobby. I even organised an international conference. I was working to a very high standard and I was incredibly focused,” she says.

    The University and College Union says the plight of young academics who are desperate to get a firm footing on the career ladder is getting worse. Staff at 146 higher education institutions have until Thursday to vote on whether to strike once again – potentially before Christmas – over unfair pay, “untenable” workloads and casualised contracts.

    Lê says: “I think the students had every expectation I was receiving a salary for my work. I think that is what students everywhere assume: that we are lecturers on proper contracts. I did tell them that wasn’t the case, but I thought telling them I was living outside was a step too far.”

    Research published this month found that nearly half of the undergraduate tutorials for which Cambridge University is famous are delivered by precariously employed staff without proper contracts. The UCU says this is a familiar story across the country.

    Lê was awarded an annual fellowship of £16,000 for three years from Royal Holloway to do her PhD on minority ethnic groups in American literature, and won an extra scholarship from the US, where she is from, in her first year. But as an international student she had to pay £8,000 a year in fees to the university (fees that have been waived for UK fellows), leaving her with £12,000 a year to live on including her wages for teaching.

    She says she was just about managing until the cheap postgraduate hall she was living in was closed for renovations at the end of her second year. She was faced with finding an extra £3,000 a year for rent, which she says she couldn’t afford. Determined not to drop out, she borrowed the tent from a friend.

    Lê admits that at first “I was really scared. I found out there was a protest camp near campus so I turned up with my tent and asked if I could stay there so I wasn’t alone. And that was the start of my next two years.”

    While in her tent she looked forward to the “reward of stability” after her PhD. She knew she might still end up taking some shorter-term contracts but thought they would overlap and she wouldn’t ever have to worry about secure housing again.

    Today Lê feels such optimism was misplaced. She gained her PhD in 2018, and tutored schoolchildren and worked at a botanical garden to make ends meet before securing two years on a fixed-term contract teaching creative writing at Exeter University. Now she is living with her parents and job-hunting again.

    “I don’t know what is going to happen. I’ve had lots of interviews, including one at Cambridge recently, but I started looking in April while I was still employed. I feel really nervous.”

    She doesn’t know if she is right not to give up. “To be honest I struggle with that question. The irony is I think I am very well suited to the job. I know I’m a really good teacher. It’s like a vocation.”

    Royal Holloway did not know that Lê was struggling financially. A spokesperson said: “We have dedicated student advisory and wellbeing teams who are here to support our students, including PhD students, with their health and wellbeing.” Services included free counselling, crisis help, and a financial wellbeing team who could offer information on extra funding for which students may be eligible, he said.

    Vicky Blake, the president of UCU, said: “Many people are still shocked to learn that higher education is one of the most casualised sectors in the British economy. There are at least 75,000 staff on insecure contracts: workers who are exploited, underpaid, and often pushed to the brink by senior management teams relying on goodwill and a culture of fear.”

    The union’s research shows one-third of academics are employed on fixed-term contracts, and 41% of teaching-only academics are on hourly paid contracts. Women and BAME staff are more likely to be employed insecurely.

    Jasmine Warren, who teaches psychology part-time alongside her PhD at the University of Liverpool, says: “As a woman finishing your PhD and going straight into precarious contracts, you have to ask: at what point do I choose to have a family? At what point can I buy a house? I haven’t seen any university advertising lecturer positions with a contract of more than a year recently. We are expected to accept this as normal.”

    Sian Jones (not her real name) spent six months sleeping on friends’ floors while researching her PhD and teaching history for £15 an hour at a Russell Group university. Jones has a disability, and in the third year of her PhD her funding was frozen when she had to take a month out after surgery. Shortly afterwards she had to leave her home because of domestic violence. She couldn’t afford a deposit or rent.

    “It was a really hard time, carrying on teaching and doing my research while I had nowhere to live,” she says. “I ended up with severe PTSD.”

    Jones eventually finished her PhD while juggling two casual teaching jobs at two institutions an hour apart. “I’m still exhausted,” she says. “I’m now one of the lucky ones because I’ve got a three-year contract, so I can at last relax a bit. But knowing in two and a half years you will be unemployed again is absolutely terrifying.”

    Raj Jethwa, the chief executive of the Universities and Colleges Employers’ Association, said: “Despite UCU repeatedly rejecting opportunities to work with employers in this important area, employers have continued their efforts to reduce the sector’s reliance on fixed-term contracts.”

    He said that over the last five years fixed-term academic contracts had declined and “the vast majority of teaching is delivered by staff with open-ended contracts”.

    He added: “It is very disappointing that UCU is encouraging its members to take damaging industrial action which is specifically designed to disrupt teaching and learning for students who have endured so many recent upheavals.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2021/oct/30/my-students-never-knew-the-lecturer-who-lived-in-a-tent
    #université #pauvreté #précarité #ESR #Angleterre #UK #facs #SDF #sans-abri #sans-abrisme #enseignement

    ping @_kg_

  • English schools must not teach ‘#white_privilege’ as fact, government warns

    Comments ahead of new guidance ‘simplistic and unhelpful’, say teaching unions

    English schools should not teach “contested theories and opinions … such as white privilege” as fact, the government has said prior to the publication of new guidance outlining how teaching certain political issues could break the law.

    Schools should avoid promoting “partisan political views” and must instead teach racial and social justice topics in a “balanced and factual manner”, according to the government’s official response to a report on the educational disadvantages faced by white working-class pupils published by the education committee in June.

    The Department for Education is working with schools to develop new guidance on how “to teach about complex political issues, in line with [schools’] legal duties on political impartiality, covering factors including age-appropriateness and the use of external agencies”, the response said.

    Kim Johnson, the Labour MP for Liverpool Riverside and a member of the education committee that produced the report, said the response failed to provide a serious plan to tackle widening educational inequality in England. “Instead of manufacturing a culture war focusing on the use of terms such as ‘white privilege’, this government needs to wake up to the harsh realities facing the lives of people every day. The education sector is facing a crisis of funding, and regional inequalities are widening despite this government’s talk of levelling up,” she said.

    At the time of publication she had disowned the education committee report on the grounds it had “cherrypicked data”, and had submitted her alternative version calling for “an end to the divisive framing” and for the government to focus on the root cause of widening educational inequalities, chiefly cuts to education and welfare services.

    Halima Begum, chief executive of the Runnymede Trust, said that teaching race discrimination was “not a political matter”. She said: “Preoccupying teachers and school administrators with politically charged discussions about ‘white privilege’ would appear to have very little to do with the primary issue of addressing socio-economic disparities.”

    Natalie Arnett, senior equalities officer at the National Association of Head Teachers said schools should be trusted to have conversations with pupils “that are right for their contexts and communities”, adding that “simplistic diktats like this from central government are unhelpful”.

    Julie McCulloch, director of policy at the Association of School and College Leaders, said schools were “very experienced at teaching controversial and challenging subject matter and helping young people to understand complex issues”, including by exploring topics from different viewpoints. She said the legal requirement for teachers to remain politically impartial was already well understood. “We are not convinced that further government guidance in this area is either necessary or helpful,” she said.

    The report from the Conservative-dominated education committee argued that terms such as “white privilege”, defined as white people benefiting from particular advantages in society, may have contributed towards systemic neglect of white disadvantaged communities. It also stated that schools teaching the concept could be in breach of the Equality Act 2010.

    Last year Kemi Badenoch, the equalities minister, warned that schools teaching pupils that white privilege was an uncontested fact were breaking the law.

    The government’s report, titled The Forgotten: How White Working-class Pupils Have Been Let Down, and How to Change It, looked at the poor educational outcomes for white British pupils eligible for free school meals because of persistent multigenerational disadvantage, regional underinvestment and disengagement from the curriculum.

    The document included findings that just 53% of disadvantaged white British pupils met development expectation at the end of the early years foundation stage, while only 17.7% achieved grade 5 or above in English and maths, among the lowest proportions of any ethnic group. White working-class pupils were also the least likely group to go on to higher education.

    The government said it planned to consider including additional funding in the comprehensive spending review for free schools to be established in parts of England with the greatest need, as well as longer-term funding for early years, two areas the committee highlighted as needing additional investment.

    Sir Peter Lampl, founder of the social mobility charity the Sutton Trust, said the government should also consider increasing the pupil premium for disadvantaged pupils and extending it to those aged over 16 in the spending review, which he said would be a “landmark moment for the government to show their commitment to disadvantaged children and young people”.

    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2021/oct/21/english-schools-must-not-teach-white-privilege-as-fact-government-warns
    #école #éducation #censure #privilège_blanc #UK #Angleterre #racisme #justice_sociale #impartialité

    ping @karine4 @isskein @cede

  • Garantir une #liberté_académique effective

    Ce billet est consacré à la notion de liberté académique. Auparavant, nous traitons succinctement de trois sujets d’actualité.

    #Maccarthysme — Depuis le 16 février, nous vivons une de ces séquences maccarthystes qui ont fait le quotidien des Bolsonaro, Trump, Johnson et autres Orbán [1], et qui se répètent désormais dans le nôtre. L’attaque de l’exécutif contre les scientifiques a été déclenchée à l’approche des élections régionales par Mme #Vidal, possiblement tête de liste à Nice. Cet épisode politicien consternant ouvre la campagne des présidentielles pour le chef de l’État ainsi que pour les autres ministres chargés de chasser sur les terres lexicales de l’#extrême_droite. La charge consiste à désigner comme non scientifiques certains domaines de la #recherche et à les associer au #terrorisme, par un nom chimérique construit sur le modèle de l’adjectif « #judéo-bolchévique », de sinistre mémoire. La #menace est réelle. Mais elle ne vient pas des travaux insufflés par une libido politique, qui innervent aujourd’hui un grand nombre de disciplines des sciences dures et humaines, elle vient de la #stratégie_politique qui accuse la recherche et l’#Université d’être politisées tout en leur enjoignant ailleurs de légitimer les choix « sociétaux » des politiques [2] ou de répondre dans l’urgence à une crise par des appels à projet [3]. Elle s’entend dans ce lexique confusionniste et moraliste qui prétend dire ce qu’est la #science sans en passer par la #méthode_scientifique. Elle se reconnaît à la fiction du débat qui occupe l’#espace_médiatique par #tribunes de #presse et, bien pire, sur les plateaux des chaînes de #télévision singeant le modèle de Fox News et des médias ultraconservateurs états-uniens.

    La menace nous appelle donc à forger de solides réseaux de #solidarité pour les affronter et à nous réarmer intellectuellement, pour réinstituer l’Université.

    #Zéro_Covid — Nous avons à nouveau demandé au Président de la République, au Premier Ministre et au Ministre de la santé de recevoir une délégation de chercheurs pour proposer une série de mesures de sécurisation sanitaire composant une stratégie globale Zéro Covid (https://rogueesr.fr/zero-covid), conformément à la tribune (https://rogueesr.fr/zero-covid) signée, déjà, par plus de mille chercheuses et chercheurs.

    #Hcéres — Dans ce contexte, il peut être pertinent de revenir sur le fonctionnement du Hcéres, instance symptomatique s’il en est des menaces institutionnelles qui pèsent sur la liberté académique. Le collège du Hcéres réuni le 1er mars a entériné le recrutement de M. #Larrouturou comme directeur du département d’évaluation des organismes nationaux de recherche. M. Larrouturou était, avant sa démission le soir de l’adoption de la LPR, à la tête de la Direction générale de la recherche et de l’innovation (DGRI). À ce titre, il a organisé la nomination de M. #Coulhon à la présidence du collège du Hcéres. À qui en douterait encore, ce renvoi d’ascenseur confirme l’imbrication des différentes bureaucraties de la recherche et leur entre-soi conduisant au #conflit_d’intérêt permanent.

    Certains militants d’une fausse liberté académique, dans une tribune récemment publiée, ont par ailleurs présenté le département d’évaluation de la recherche comme l’instance légitime pour une mission de contrôle politique des facultés. Il est donc intéressant de relever que ce département demeurera dirigé par un conférencier occasionnel de l’#Action_Française, le mouvement de #Charles_Maurras à qui l’on doit le mythe de l’Université inféodée aux quatre États confédérés (Juifs, Protestants, Francs-Maçons, « Métèques ») [4].

    Enfin, trois membres d’instances nationales de La République en Marche apparaissent dorénavant dans l’organigramme du Hcéres, confortant les craintes de constitution d’un ministère Bis en charge de la reprise en main de la recherche.

    Garantir une liberté académique effective — Vous trouverez ici la première partie de notre synthèse : Réinstituer la liberté académique : https://rogueesr.fr/liberte-academique.

    –---

    [1] À ce sujet, on pourra lire l’actualité récente en Angleterre, frappante de similitude :

    - Government to appoint “free-speech champion” for English universities : https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/feb/14/government-to-appoint-free-speech-champion-for-universities-heritage-hi
    - A political scientist defends white identity policies : https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/a-political-scientist-defends-white-identity-politics-eric-kaufmann-white
    - Gavin Williamson using “misleading” research to justify campus free-speech law : https://www.theguardian.com/education/2021/feb/27/gavin-williamson-using-misleading-research-to-justify-campus-free-speec

    [2] Le CNRS célèbre ses 80 ans : http://www.cnrs.fr/fr/cnrsinfo/le-cnrs-celebre-ses-80-ans

    [3] Face aux attentats : un an de mobilisation au CNRS : https://www.cnrs.fr/fr/face-aux-attentats-un-de-mobilisation-au-cnrs

    [4] Les convictions politiques de la personne en question n’auraient pas vocation à apparaître sur la place publique s’il n’était pas précisément question de lui confier une mission de contrôle politique des universités. D’autre part, nous nous refusons à mentionner des liens vers des pages pointant vers des sites d’extrême-droite. Les lecteurs soucieux de vérification les trouveront sans peine.

    https://rogueesr.fr/2021/03/03
    #libertés_académiques

    –—

    ajouté au fil de discussion autour des propos tenus par Vidal :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/902062

    • La #résistance s’organise à #Sorbonne_Univresité

      Les paniques identitaires n’ont pas leur place à @Sorbonne_Univ_ !

      Le 07 et 08 Janvier se tiendra en Sorbonne le colloque « Après la déconstruction : reconstruire les sciences et la culture ».
      Nous nous opposons à l’accueil des idées réactionnaires au sein de notre université

      Avec Solidaires Étu SU, l’ASU, la BAFFE et le NPA Jussieu-ENS, nous dénonçons l’accueil de ce pseudo colloque portant sur la "cancel culture" et la lutte contre les discriminations qui menacerait "le monde éducatif, où elle y a déjà causé quelques dégâts" d’après sa description.

      Nous demandons à ce que @Sorbonne_Univ_ se désolidarise de la tenue d’un tel colloque dans l’un de ses campus !
      Nous soulignons également la présence du ministre Blanquer qui préfère à l’éducation nationale crédibiliser les fantasmes identitaires !

      https://twitter.com/UNEFsorbonneU/status/1479104625533804551

      #résistance

    • Ceci n’est pas un colloque universitaire - communiqué

      Du 7 au 8 Janvier, l’association loi 1901 "Le Collège de Philosophie" présidé par l’un de nos collègues de la Faculté des Lettres (Pierre-Henri Tavoillot) organise un colloque intitulé « Après la déconstruction : reconstruire les sciences et la culture ». Utilisant pernicieusement le crédit de l’université qui l’héberge - l’université est un lieu de liberté d’expression, cette réunion partisane se présente comme un colloque "d’échanges scientifiques" visant à « étudier les tenants et aboutissants de la pensée décoloniale, "wokisme", ou "cancel culture" et comment elle s’introduit dans le système éducatif pour y imposer une morale au détriment de l’esprit critique » (sic). Les conclusions de ce "colloque" sont déjà connues, puisqu’elles sont dans son titre : la "cancel culture" (terme utilisé par les conservateurs américains et amalgamé ici avec la pensée décoloniale, courant intellectuel anti-raciste) venue des États-Unis aurait détruit les sciences et la culture, et il faudrait les reconstruire. Par un grossier retournement de la réalité, ce pseudo-colloque universitaire implémente exactement ce qu’il entend dénoncer : le camouflage d’une idéologie sous couvert de recherche universitaire, aidé par la localisation de cette réunion politique dans une université !

      La liberté d’expression est la règle à l’université, et il est donc possible d’y organiser des réunions politiques. Une réunion de La France Insoumise ou d’En Marche qui y aurait lieu n’entraînerait aucun doute sur l’absence de caractère universitaire d’une telle réunion. Par contre, un "colloque" organisé par "le Collège de Philosophie" (qui n’a aucune reconnaissance universitaire) utilise la tutelle du lieu pour déguiser des propos idéologiques en "recherche" ou "échanges scientifiques".

      SUD Éducation appelle les collègues de toute catégorie professionnelle et les étudiant.e.s à ne pas tomber dans le panneau de ce colloque idéologique pseudo-scientifique
      1. Un parti pris idéologique revendiqué, indigne d’un vrai colloque scientifique

      Sans prendre en compte la réalité du racisme, du sexisme, des oppressions coloniales, ce colloque s’oppose à leur étude sociologique ou historique. Le constat est fait dès la présentation du colloque : un "ordre moral" serait introduit (comment ? par qui ?) qui serait "incompatible" avec le système éducatif. On parle d’ailleurs de "wokisme" ou de "cancel culture" dont les définitions sont absentes, ce qui peut laisser penser que les organisateurs et organisatrices ne les connaissent pas elles-mêmes ou choisissent délibérément de les garder dans le flou (rendant ainsi plus facile leur caricature et leur condamnation). On peut remarquer que le terme "pensée décoloniale", présenté comme synonyme de ces termes, est au contraire revendiqué par des courants anti-racistes, ce qui confirme la connaissance rigoureuse que les organisateurs du colloque semblent avoir des courants de pensée dont ils entendent discuter.
      Et surtout, dans ce "colloque", aucune trace de la disputatio, une des règles de base de la recherche et de son intégrité. Aucun-e représentant-e des études décoloniales n’intervient dans cet évènement. Ceci n’est donc pas un colloque universitaire mais un colloque politique et idéologique.

      2. Une réunion politique et publicitaire

      Les intervenant.e.s de ce colloque ne sont pas neutres. Une discussion sérieuse autour de questions scientifiques impliquerait la présence d’intervenant.e.s varié.e.s et la possibilité d’un débat contradictoire. Toutefois, beaucoup des intervenant.e.s invité.e.s sont connu.e.s plutôt pour leur opposition médiatique aux questions de l’antiracisme et du féminisme, que pour leur travaux de recherche sur ces questions : Mathieu Bock-Côté et ses aspirations identitaires décrites dans "L’empire du politiquement correct", qui remplace désormais Éric Zemmour sur CNEWS, Jacques Julliard qui ironise sur une gauche qui aurait abandonné la nation et l’identité nationale au profit de la diversité (voir les conclusions "L’esprit du peuple"), Nathalie Heinich dont on peut supposer qu’elle parlera "des enjeux épistémologiques de la post-vérité" plutôt en tant que signataire de la tribune "Non au séparatisme islamiste" du Figaro (mars 2018) qu’en tant que sociologue de l’art, pour prendre des exemples connus... De plus que vient faire une table ronde de "témoins" du "néoracisme", invitant entre autres Pascal Bruckner, essayiste, dans un colloque universitaire ? La présence du romancier fait résonner ses propos manichéen sur la lutte contre l’islamophobie, la comparant à une "chasse aux sorcières", ou ses accusations contre Rokhaya Diallo, mettant en cause son militantisme comme ayant entraîné les attentats meurtriers contre Charlie Hebdo en 2015. Face à des intervenant.e.s aussi politisé.e.s et venu.e.s défendre leurs écrits politiques au regard du programme, où est la contradiction ? Remarquons que le ministre de l’Éducation Nationale semble avoir le temps de sonner le départ de ces deux jours de réunion, alors que la situation des établissements scolaires est catastrophique.

      3. Un évènement de propagande de la "pensée" réactionnaire

      En conséquence, nous appelons nos collègues et les étudiant.e.s de Sorbonne Université a être vigilant.e.s vis-à-vis du déguisement universitaire d’une idéologie réactionnaire en vogue actuellement. Ce "colloque" ne peut être considéré comme indépendant des attaques médiatiques et politiciennes envers des collègues, accusé.e.s d’"islamogauchisme" par les ministres de l’ESR et de l’Éducation Nationale, ainsi que des personnalités politiques dans la droite ligne de l’extrême-droite qui en d’autres temps accusait l’Université d’être sous l’emprise judéo-maçonnique (voir la Une de Paris Soir du samedi 31 Novembre 1940). Nous pensons que ce colloque pseudo-scientifique vise à légitimer ces attaques, et à censurer toute pensée universitaire critique des dominations. Dans le respect des traditions universitaires, nous appelons au contraire à défendre les libertés pédagogiques et de recherche et l’indépendance de nos collègues face à l’ingérence des tutelles politiques nationales ou régionales. Ce n’est que dans de telles conditions que la recherche et les idées nouvelles peuvent s’épanouir !

      https://sud-su.fr/spip.php?article36

    • Communiqué FERC Sup Sorbonne Université - Ceci est-il un colloque universitaire ?

      Les 7 et 8 janvier 2022 se tiendra dans un amphithéâtre de la Sorbonne un événement intitulé « Après la déconstruction : reconstruire les sciences et la culture ».

      Cette réunion se présente comme un colloque "d’échanges scientifiques" visant à "étudier les tenants et aboutissants de la pensée décoloniale, "wokisme", ou "cancel culture" et comment elle s’introduit dans le système éducatif pour y imposer une morale au détriment de l’esprit critique".

      Ce colloque va être ouvert par Blanquer le ministre de l’Éducation nationale qui affirmait il y a un an, sans jamais être revenu sur ses dires que « Notre société a été beaucoup trop perméable à des courants de pensée « Ce qu’on appelle l’islamo-gauchisme fait des ravages », « Il fait des ravages à l’université, il fait des ravages quand l’UNEF cède à ce type de chose, il fait des ravages quand dans les rangs de la France Insoumise, vous avez des gens qui sont de ce courant-là et s’affichent comme tels. Ces gens-là favorisent une idéologie qui ensuite, de loin en loin, mène au pire ».

      Ce colloque pourrait-il être instrumentalisé en meeting politique qui s’inscrirait dans la droite ligne des discours de Blanquer et Vidal ? Blanquer, comme Vidal, prétendent que l’islamogauchisme (terme maintenant remplacé par celui de wokisme) « gangrène l’université ». Or, cette parole ministérielle, pendant une année de campagne présidentielle, et en pleine pandémie qui étouffe encore un peu plus les personnels de l’éducation nationale et l’hôpital, dans un colloque universitaire soulève des questions bien légitimes.

      En outre, cet événement est organisé sur le site de Sorbonne Université. Dès lors, la responsabilité et l’image de notre université sont engagées.

      La plupart des intervenants de cette manifestation sont signataires du « manifeste des 100 » qui appelait à la dénonciation des "islamo-gauchistes". Un certain nombre sont également membres de l’« Observatoire du décolonialisme », dont l’activité principale semble aussi être de dénoncer des collègues sur internet. Cet événement qui aura lieu les 7 et 8 janvier reprend les mêmes thèmes, en évitant soigneusement le terme d’« islamo-gauchisme » (devenu trop sulfureux ?) mais en ciblant les études décoloniales, sans laisser place au débat contradictoire. Ainsi, le colloque annoncé pourrait paraître comme une opération politique à laquelle participeront des personnes qui appellent régulièrement à la dénonciation et à la censure de collègues sur le site de l’« Observatoire du décolonialisme ».

      Il y a pourtant moins d’un an, l’ancien président de Sorbonne Université, Jean Chambaz avait pris position très clairement au sujet de l’"islamo-gauchisme", à contre-courant des déclarations de la ministre Mme Vidal : "Il y a une orientation de ce gouvernement qui va draguer des secteurs de l’opinion publique dans des endroits assez nauséabonds" "L’islamo-gauchisme est un terme absolument peu précis, issu des milieux de la droite extrême, repris par certains députés LR qui voudraient interdire l’enseignement de certaines disciplines à l’université. On se croirait dans l’ancienne Union soviétique. Ça me fait davantage penser aux slogans du 20e siècle dénonçant le judéo-bolchévisme." Selon l’ancien président de Sorbonne Université, le mal qui "gangrène" la société n’est pas cet "islamo-gauchisme" mal défini et qui est agité, selon lui, comme un chiffon rouge. "On accole deux mots qui font peur pour ne pas définir une réalité. Mais qu’est-ce que ça veut dire ? martèle-t-il. Qu’est-ce qui gangrène la société ? C’est la discrimination, c’est la ghettoïsation, c’est l’inégalité sociale dans l’accès au travail, dans l’accès à l’éducation, à la culture, et l’échec des politiques publiques dans ce domaine depuis cinquante ans.".

      Nous ne demandons pas l’annulation de cette manifestation qui doit être reconnue comme telle. Mais il ne peut y avoir d’appel à la délation et de chasse à certains collègues. Ce que nous attendons de la nouvelle présidente de l’université, c’est un engagement lié à votre fonction qui vous charge d’une mission de protection des personnels de l’université.

      Pour mémoire, début 2021, comme 2000 personnes qui avaient signé cette réponse au manifeste des 100, votre prédécesseur M.Chambaz avait accordé la protection fonctionnelle aux collègues qui en avaient fait la demande après avoir été mis en cause publiquement dans cette chasse aux sorcières.

      Ce que nous attendons donc de la présidence de l’université, c’est qu’elle donne l’assurance à nos collègues :

      - qu’il sera accordé systématiquement le bénéfice de la protection fonctionnelle à toutes celles et tous ceux qui seront mis-es en cause publiquement dans l’exercice de leurs missions d’enseignement et de recherche,
      - et qu’il sera donné pour consigne à la direction des affaires juridiques de l’université d’effectuer un signalement auprès du ministère de l’intérieur pour toute dénonciation calomnieuse publiée sur internet ou ailleurs, sur simple demande de la personne concernée.

      https://www.ferc-cgt.org/communqiue-ferc-sup-sorbonne-universite-ceci-est-il-un-colloque-universita

  • After Covid, will digital learning be the new normal ? | Schools | The Guardian

    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2021/jan/23/after-covid-will-digital-learning-be-the-new-normal

    https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1452830978618-d6feae7d0ffa?ixid=MXwxMjA3fDB8MHxwaG90by1wYWdlf

    For some, the resulting global edtech boom is long overdue. Andreas Schleicher, head of education at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), has described the pandemic as creating “a great moment” for learning. In May, New York governor Andrew Cuomo publicly questioned why physical classrooms still exist at all, as he announced that former Google CEO Eric Schmidt and Bill Gates would help rethink education in the state.

    Sceptics, however, warn that a “digital divide” further widens existing attainment gaps and inequalities faced by disadvantaged children. Others say schools are ill-equipped to protect their pupils’ data, and that the growing role of commercial interests both within state education and through a booming direct-to-consumer edtech market amounts to privatisation by stealth.

    Le covid ou la stratégie du choc

    Critics like the writer Naomi Klein say the tech giants were quick to see Covid-19 as an opportunity to accelerate their ambitions in education. In June, for example, Microsoft published a position paper called Education Reimagined. It starts: “The fallout from Covid-19, continuing advances in digital technology, and intensifying pent-up demand for student-centred learning have combined to present an unprecedented opportunity to transform education across whole systems.”

    Big data de l’éducation

    Schleicher dismisses such fears. “When you watch Netflix you contribute to the data systems and that will help with customisation. That’s how big data works. I don’t think we should put education in a different box.”

    Privatisation progressive de l’école

    Edtech companies, both large and small, have seen major user number growth thanks to Covid-19. Critics fear this could lead to the erosion of some core principles of state provision. “If we understand privatisation as the provision by the private sector of services traditionally provided by the state, then during the pandemic, a vast part of schooling in the UK has been privatised,” says Ben Williamson, an education researcher at the University of Edinburgh. “Getting into schools, at very large scale, positions Google, Microsoft and others to keep rolling out their new model of ever-more digital schooling, based on data analytics, artificial intelligence and automated, adaptive functions.”

    La voie du milieu : les technocritiques

    Those voicing concerns stress they are not against digital tools per se. Rather they question the growing role of those with financial interests in edtech in determining how they are used and in shaping the way schools are run. “Big-tech billionaires have an oversized influence in shaping education policy,” says Watters. “Some of these companies pay very, very low taxes, and their responsibilities are to start contributing properly in taxes, not to provide free Chromebooks. We need schools to be more about what the public wants and not what edtech companies want them to look like.”

    #edtech #covid #digital-learning

  • UCL (University College London) makes formal public apology for its history and legacy of eugenics
    https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2021/jan/ucl-makes-formal-public-apology-its-history-and-legacy-eugenics

    The apology is part of a range of actions by UCL to acknowledge and address its historical links with the eugenics movement, including denaming spaces on its campus named after the prominent eugenicists #Francis_Galton and #Karl_Pearson, enacted in June 2020.

    #eugénisme
    https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Galton
    https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Pearson

  • UK’s top universities urged to act on classism and accent prejudice

    Investigation finds widespread evidence of students being ridiculed over their backgrounds

    Universities must act to eradicate discrimination against working-class students, including the mockery of regional accents, equality campaigners have said.

    A Guardian investigation has found widespread evidence of students at some of the country’s leading universities being ridiculed over their accents and backgrounds, in some cases prompting them to leave education.

    The analysis found discrimination against working-class students was particularly prevalent among Russell Group universities. The group, which is made up of 24 institutions, has a reputation for academic excellence.

    In a series of Guardian interviews, students past and present reported bullying and harassment over their accents and working-class backgrounds. Some said their academic ability was questioned because of the way they spoke.

    The Social Mobility Commission (SMC), which monitors progress in improving social mobility in the UK, described the situation as unacceptable and said accents had become a “tangible barrier” for some students.

    This week the Guardian reported complaints of a “toxic attitude” towards some northern students at Durham University. Last month the university launched an inquiry after wealthy prospective freshers reportedly planned a competition to have sex with the poorest student they could find.

    But experiences of classism and accent prejudice are not confined to Durham, said Sammy Wright, the lead commissioner on schools and higher education for the SMC. He said the government body had spent 18 months examining the differing chances for young people based on where they come from.

    “We found an entrenched pattern in certain areas where social mobility is very low, and often the only way to grasp opportunities involved moving away from where they were brought up – to go to university or find jobs,” said Wright, who is also vice-principal of Southmoor Academy in Sunderland.

    “But we also found that social and economic disadvantage often hampered any chance to move out. Accent is a part of this, alongside cultural capital and social networks. In my own work in schools in the north-east, accent can become a marker of everything else, a tangible barrier – most of all to the young people themselves, who internalise a sense of social inferiority.”

    Wright said well-meaning university outreach teams were consistently failing in their efforts to reassure working-class students. “They promise their institutions are friendly and welcoming, but when that message comes in a home counties accent from bored middle-class students who have been sent into the north to deliver the message, my students are rightly sceptical.”

    The Sutton Trust, a charity that helps young people from disadvantaged backgrounds access higher education, called on top universities to do more to ensure an inclusive and supportive environment for all undergraduates.

    Sir Peter Lampl, the trust’s founder and chair, described the experiences of some students as “scandalous”. “It’s really tough for young people from low-income backgrounds to get into top universities. For this and for other reasons, it’s completely unacceptable that they are discriminated against while they’re there,” he said.

    Analysis by the Office for Students (OfS), the government’s higher education regulator, shows that virtually all communities with the lowest levels of access to higher education are in industrial towns and cities of the north of England and the Midlands, and in coastal towns. For example, the most recent data shows that 55% of young people in London go into higher education but only 40% in the north-east.

    The OfS director for fair access and participation, Chris Millward, said the issue of accent prejudice spoke to deeper inequalities in the education system. “It is crucial that universities strive to create an open and inclusive culture for all. There is no such thing as a ‘right’ accent or background for higher education – all students deserve the opportunity to thrive, no matter where they come from,” he said.

    Sara Khan, a vice-president of the National Union of Students, said working-class students were sold a “myth of meritocracy”, but in some cases the reality was starkly different.

    “As long as working-class students have to pay for education, work alongside their studies to cover basic necessities, and are saddled with debt for the rest of their lives, higher education will never be a welcoming environment for them,” she said. “It is unfortunately inevitable that in a system like this, such students would face prejudice and harassment, which is only the tip of the iceberg regarding the classism in our education system.”

    The Russell Group has been contacted for comment.

    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2020/oct/24/uk-top-universities-urged-act-classism-accent-prejudice
    #UK #Angleterre #classisme #classes_sociales #discriminations #classe_sociale #université #éducation #langue #accent #accents #classes_ouvrières

  • Schools in England told not to use anti-capitalist material in teaching
    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2020/sep/27/uk-schools-told-not-to-use-anti-capitalist-material-in-teaching

    The government has ordered schools in England not to use resources from organisations which have expressed a desire to end capitalism.

    Department for Education (DfE) guidance issued on Thursday for school leaders and teachers involved in setting the relationship, sex and health curriculum categorised anti-capitalism as an “extreme political stance” and equated it with opposition to freedom of speech, antisemitism and endorsement of illegal activity.

  • ’Punishment by statistics’ : the father who foresaw A-level algorithm flaws
    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2020/aug/14/punishment-by-statistics-the-father-who-foresaw-a-level-algorithm-flaws

    Huy Duong had long warned 39% of grades between A* and D would be lower than teacher assessments When the English exams regulator set out how grades would be awarded following the cancellation of GCSE and A-levels this summer, there was suspicion of its “standardisation model” – a mysterious algorithm designed to avoid grade inflation. Ofqual probably reckoned on a bit of pushback from the Labour party and maybe the teaching unions too. But in the end it was a statistics-savvy dad worried (...)

    #algorithme #racisme #discrimination #enseignement #notation #pauvreté

    ##pauvreté
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/93dcbed3c1274fc4cf4953a8ef77361ff5dc0fec/234_421_5307_3184/master/5307.jpg

  • Downgraded A-level students urged to join possible legal action
    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2020/aug/13/downgraded-a-level-students-urged-to-join-possible-legal-action

    Legal letter sent to Ofqual and DfE calls for changes to ‘unfair’ grading algorithm Students affected by the mass downgrading of A-level results in England have been urged to join a possible legal action against the Department for Education and the exams regulator. Nearly 40% of A-level assessments by teachers were downgraded by the Office of Qualifications and Examinations Regulation’s algorithm, according to official figures published on Thursday morning. The method for allocating results (...)

    #algorithme #biais #discrimination #enseignement #AlgorithmWatch

    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/0f6553ef78dc76f0dc5f17731c1001de2785f5c6/0_283_6962_4179/master/6962.jpg

  • Italian lessons : what we’ve learned from two months of home schooling | Education | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2020/apr/24/italy-home-schooling-coronavirus-lockdown-what-weve-learned
    https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1509062522246-3755977927d7?ixlib=rb-1.2.1&ixid=eyJhcHBfaWQiOj

    #education #continuitepedagogique #italie

    Morceaux choisis :

    => l’incompréhension que l’éducation soit la première activité « sacrifiée »

    The decision was, in many ways, shocking. At that time, there had only been three deaths from Covid-19 in Italy, and only 152 reported infections. It seemed strange that education was the first social activity to be sacrificed. I guessed it was because it wasn’t perceived to be economically productive. Nothing else was closing: football grounds, bars, shops and ski resorts were still open for business, and no schools in any other European country had closed.

    => Annonce rapide, et pas de plan ou de ressource pour l’enseignement à distance

    The announcement had been so sudden that schools had few plans or resources in place to teach remotely. Italy spends a lot less on education than almost every other western country. Spending per student (from primary school to university) equates to $8,966 per annum, compared to $11,028 in the UK and $11,502 in Sweden..

    => Une formation minimale en Italie, un système conservateur et descendant, des enseignants âgés

    Nor did many Italian teachers seem to know how to approach this new world in which they found themselves. There is minimal teacher-training in Italy. University graduates are often thrown into a classroom without any knowledge of pedagogic theories or practical experience. Inspections are almost unheard of. The result is that Italian education is, at its worst, particularly conservative and condescending: the pupil is seen as an empty vessel to be filled with knowledge that is regurgitated in exams

    => En Italie aussi, ce sont largement les enseignants qui se sont débrouillés, dans un assez gros bordel

    The closing of all Italy’s schools meant teachers found themselves having to invent a new kind of classroom from scratch. There were no ministerial guidelines or approved websites. “The entirety of this new form of online teaching,” said Daniele Martino, a middle-school teacher in Turin, “was created by us teachers at the last minute.”

    At the beginning, it was chaotic. There was little coordination between different teachers within the same schools, let alone across different schools, and parents reported finding themselves boggled by a vast array of IT platforms: Meet, Classroom, Zoom, Jitsi, Edmodo. The problem wasn’t only that sites and servers crashed as the country’s almost 8 million students all logged on. Many kids couldn’t connect at all.

    => Problèmes d’équipements toujours...

    The attempt by many teachers to get less-privileged students the necessary laptops and internet connections is one of the untold stories of this crisis. By 19 March, the ministry of education claimed to have distributed 46,152 tablets throughout the country. Since then, an emergency budget has created a €70m fund for providing computers to those without.

    => Mais problèmes sociaux et humain aussi et surtout

    Even if the necessary hardware is distributed, one special educational needs teacher told me that online classes just don’t work for children who need bespoke lessons: “Those who are already doing well at school are now doing even better, but those who were struggling are just falling further behind.”

    => Les particularités d’un système éducatif italien particulièrement conservateur

    But school was also being reinvented because Italy’s traditional educational stick had been removed. Usually pupils are given many tests each month and if, at the end of the year, their average score is insufficient, they’re bocciato – failed – and have to repeat the year. Now, teachers quickly realised there was no way to stop students cheating in tests.

    Traditionalist teachers were beside themselves. One parent in Umbria told me how a teacher stormed out of the virtual classroom when she discovered how many pupils were cheating.

    Between the cheating and the automatic promotion to the next school year, teachers who needed a big stick suddenly found themselves disarmed.

    => Bataille entre conservateurs, réformistes, et réflexions sur le métiers

    There has always been a battle in Italy between hardliners and child-centred reformers such as Maria Montessori. It now seemed as if progressives had the upper hand.

    Many teachers have had to soften their approach, to take into account what their pupils were going through. “Some of them have lost a grandparent”, said Paola Lante, a primary-school teacher in Milan. “Their parents are losing their jobs or are fighting at home. At the end of the day, a teacher has to be a steadying influence, a social worker and a psychologist.”

    => Les parents, le home-schooling, la classe à la maison : la co-éducation

    Even though the kids had enough spare time to be habitually bored, they were no longer cleaning the house or doing their daily learning tasks. Spelling tests and fitness regimes were forgotten. They seemed to have become – if not agoraphobic – certainly “agora-meh”.

    It’s hard, as a parent, not to be frustrated, especially if – as a writer – you regret that they never read books. Every time I emerged from my office, I would see them all on their screens, headphones on. Lessons had become indistinguishable from down-time. For all the idealism about digital learning, it seemed extraordinarily passive to me.

    => Le confinement met tout le monde en insécurité

    The more you look at the educational conundrum in lockdown Italy, the more you see everyone’s vulnerabilities. Students have always felt fretful because of their weekly tests and the stigma of being held back a year. But now many teachers feel insecure, too: not just because education seems like the last priority of government, but because they are scared of digitalised learning and fear being replaced by screens.

    Chiara Esposito, a middle-school teacher, told me “parents are the most conservative element in the school ecosystem. They become paranoid if their child isn’t ‘an eight’ or hasn’t completed the set book. They’re the ones we really need to educate.”

    Surprisingly, even the education technology firms promoting digital learning platforms to schools feel apprehensive. [Lorenzo Benussi] is concerned that teachers are using new tech to reproduce the same old teaching methods, instead of grasping this opportunity for a completely new kind of teaching. “When all this talk about digital learning began back in March,” he said, “I was very, very worried, because it’s not about technology. Technology is just a means. Its effectiveness depends entirely on your didactic approach.”

  • Lecturers condemn #Durham University’s plan to shift degrees online

    The university plans to radically redesign its curriculum to cut in-person teaching by 25%.

    The University and College Union (UCU) has condemned plans by Durham University to provide online-only degrees and significantly reduce face-to-face lecturing in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

    The union’s general secretary Jo Grady called on the university to halt proposals to cut “live” teaching by 25% as part of a radical shift towards providing online learning, which she described as “destructive” and “an attack on staff”.

    The radical redesign of the university’s curriculum, revealed by student newspaper Palatinate, would “invert Durham’s traditional educational model”, based on residential study, with one that places “online resources at the core enabling us to provide education at a distance”.

    The proposals, drawn up by deputy vice-chancellor Antony Long and vice-provost for education Alan Houston, warned that Durham has been slow to develop online education compared to its competitors, which posed “a very significant financial and reputational risk” to the university.

    Under the plans, seen by the Guardian, some students would only study online, some would be taught on campus, and others would do both. The proposals, drawn up without consulting staff or students, would reduce the number of modules taught in person by a quarter in the next academic year, with the goal of providing at least 500 of them completely online by the summer of 2021.

    An anthropology and archaeology student said she feared the plans would devalue her degree. She added: “This is clearly to increase the number of students on the books paying full fees, whilst maintaining existing staff levels. I feel like [a] cash cow and fear more strike action while I’m out of pocket and have very little to show for it in terms of education.”

    The document, due to be considered by the university’s senate later this month, also proposes contracting a private education firm, Cambridge Education Group Digital, to develop a business case to implement the plans.

    The UCU said that universities “should not see the global pandemic as an opportunity to try and drastically alter their different business models”, and urged Durham to consult properly with staff and students over any changes.

    Grady added: “This looks like an attack on the livelihoods and the professional expertise of hard-working staff – all to line the pockets of private providers who don’t have the same track record of providing high standards of education.

    “Durham needs to halt these plans. The fact there has been no consultation with staff or students is unacceptable and we will continue to defend the quality of education staff provide and our members’ jobs.

    “Changes to our higher education system should be led by staff from the ground up, whether they are necessitated by Covid-19 or not. We will do everything we can to challenge this and any other similarly destructive proposals.”

    The Durham plans revealed that a third of its undergraduate and half of postgraduate modules currently lack any online learning, noting: “In the short-term, we risk being unable to provide even a basic ‘minimum viable product’ online for our [academic year] 2020/21 intake.”

    The university aims to provide its key postgraduate and first-year undergraduate degrees online by October 2020, with a focus on delivering those with the most “international market potential”.

    Durham UCU branch held a virtual emergency general meeting this week where members “voted to firmly oppose rushed long-term changes taken without proper consultation”.

    More than 300 Durham academics have also signed a letter to vice-chancellor Stuart Corbridge, describing the proposals as “highly concerning … cynical and reckless”.

    Prof Antony Long, the university’s deputy vice-chancellor, said: “None of us yet know what the 2020-21 academic year will look like, but we must plan now so that when we do, we have options properly developed and ready to implement.

    “Anticipating that some and perhaps a significant number of students will not be able to travel to and live in Durham [then], we are preparing an online, distance learning programme that is both inclusive and high-quality.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2020/apr/17/lecturers-condemn-durham-universitys-plan-to-shift-degrees-online

    Préparation de #le_monde_d'après
    #coronavirus #continuité_pédagogique #confinement #travail #réduction_des_postes #UK #Angleterre #effectifs #coupes_budgétaires #coupes_dans_le_personnel #personnel #universités #facs

    –—

    Ajouté à la métaliste « #le_monde_d'après dans le domaine de l’#éducation et l’#apprentissage dans les différents pays européens » :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/839830

    • Coronavirus UK: Universities face £2.5bn tuition fee loss next year

      Capping student numbers will not avert financial catastrophe, report warns.

      Capping the number of students who can attend each British university will not stave off the financial catastrophe that institutions face following the coronavirus outbreak, a report from the University and College Union (UCU) warns.

      The report forecasts the sector could lose around £2.5bn next year in tuition fees alone, along with the loss of 30,000 university jobs, based on gloomy predictions of international and domestic students staying away if Covid-19 continues unchecked.

      The government is negotiating with the university sector to limit the number of students each institution can admit in September, in the hope that it will help some avoid cutthroat competition and possible bankruptcy if their student intake slumps.

      But the report, commissioned by UCU from London Economics, says a cap could be ineffective if more students are prepared to sit out next year. The consultancy’s forecasts show even the likes of Oxford and Cambridge seeing falling numbers of undergraduates entering from the UK and abroad.

      “Our world-renowned universities are doing crucial work now as we hunt for a [Covid-19] vaccine and will be vital engines for our recovery both nationally and in towns and cities across the UK. It is vital that the government underwrites funding lost from the fall in student numbers. These are unprecedented times and without urgent guarantees, our universities will be greatly damaged at just the time they are needed most,” said Jo Grady, the UCU’s general secretary.

      Rebecca Long-Bailey, the shadow education secretary, backed the call for greater government support. “UK universities must be valued as part of the frontline response to the coronavirus pandemic, supplying students to the NHS and conducting world-class research into the virus,” she said.

      The report suggests that universities could lose £1.5bn in international student fees, more than £600m from UK-based students, and £350m from students from the EU, based on surveys of students’ intentions, including one conducted for Ucas, the admissions service.

      Gavan Conlon, a partner at London Economics, said the pandemic will result in a “very substantial loss” in enrolments and income, requiring significant government support.

      “The proposed student numbers cap will not be enough to avoid an overly competitive market for the remaining pool of applicants, with the impact of this actually being worse for some institutions than the effect of the pandemic itself,” Conlon said.

      But Nick Hillman, the director of the Higher Education Policy Institute, said he thought the report’s forecasts for students numbers – particularly a 16% drop within the UK – were overly pessimistic.

      “I do not want to underestimate the severe impact of Covid-19 on higher education. But, given the diversity of our higher education sector, we must ask if it is right for modelling to assume every single institution will face a recruitment crisis across the board,” Hillman said.

      London Economics’ forecasts did not include the £790m lost in accommodation, catering and conference income identified by the Universities UK group of vice-chancellors in its recent submission to UK governments calling for at least £2bn in bailout funding.

      “The union is absolutely right to warn of the knock-on impacts this would have for jobs, regional economics, local communities and students,” said Alistair Jarvis, the chief executive of UUK.

      “Government must take urgent action to provide the support which can ensure universities are able to weather these very serious challenges, and to protect students, maintain research, and retain our capacity to drive the recovery of the economy and communities.”

      https://www.theguardian.com/education/2020/apr/23/coronavirus-uk-universities-face-25bn-tuition-fee-loss-next-year

  • Education was never the sole focus of schools. The coronavirus pandemic has proved it | Education | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2020/apr/14/education-was-never-the-sole-focus-of-schools-the-coronavirus-pandemic-
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/654b1ef9e3d5eff84341120bf3f55f33368036ce/0_33_2192_1314/master/2192.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    Morceaux choisis

    Headteachers went from running an ordinary school to organising a virtual school, a childcare centre and a food delivery service. They had two days to turn it around. Education was never the sole focus of schools, and it’s a shame it has taken a pandemic to prove it.

    Talking to school leaders, many are at the edge of their nerves. Some will leave, more will stay – and those who do will likely find a new zeal for fighting back.

    To get ahead, the government should make two moves. First, it must accept that schools cannot return to a situation where slashed budgets mean leaders scrimp on soap and mental health services are impenetrable. Austerity has had its day.

    #continuitepedagogique #UK

  • “Just thought I’d pass on some information which is filtering through from UK and US universities in the current crisis, and which might give you some useful arguments concerning LPPR in the coming months.

    A number of friends in UK and US universities have been told that their respective institutions will experience very large financial shortfalls over the next year. A matter of £25 million for one Scottish university, $60 million and counting for a New York university. Since they are heavily reliant on student fees, home and international, since they take rents from their students, and are reliant on money made from fee-paying Masters courses, and because they are reliant on external research grants, they are very exposed financially to the consequences of the Corona virus. Since each university employs its own academic and non-academic staff, this will create real problems in the coming year or so.

    This is what happens if you run universities like businesses. We will no doubt be subject to similar budgetary attacks in French public universities in the coming year or so (health crisis => financial crisis => you must all tighten your belts — you can already see the rhetoric being warmed up). But this problem will be political, rather than the problem of just another large-ish business.”

    –-> reçu d’un ami d’une collègue... par mail, le 10.04.2020

    #le_monde_d'après #crise_financière #austérité #universités #facs #coronavirus #taxes_universitaires #ESR #enseignements_supérieur
    #UK #Angleterre et #USA... mais aussi #France et ailleurs...

    • Universities brace for huge losses as foreign students drop out

      Call for a government bailout worth billions to help sector survive the crisis.

      Some universities are already expecting to lose more than £100m as foreign students cancel their studies, with warnings that the impact of coronavirus will be “like a tsunami hitting the sector”.

      Several organisations are now planning for a 80-100% reduction in their foreign student numbers this year, with prestigious names said to be among those most affected. The sector is already making a plea to the government for a cash injection amounting to billions of pounds to help it through the crisis, as it is hit by a drop in international student numbers, accommodation deals and conference income.

      Universities are already lining up online courses for the start of the next year, but academics are concerned about the impact on first-year students new to university life. Many institutions have recently borrowed heavily to pay for attractive new faculties, often designed to attract overseas students. It comes against a backdrop of declining numbers of university-age students in the UK and the previous uncertainty around Brexit.

      Andrew Connors, head of higher education at Lloyds Banking Group, said the crisis has felt “less like a perfect storm and more like a tsunami hitting the sector”. Banks have not had urgent requests from universities, as big financial hits are expected later in the year. However, he said that “while the immediate impact we are seeing in the sector is slower, the overall impact of Covid-19 is potentially deeper and longer”.

      In a blog for the Higher Education Policy Institute (Hepi) published today, he writes: “Many institutions are modelling reductions of between 80% and 100% in international student numbers. Every university we have spoken to expects to be impacted and for some the potential loss to income is projected to be greater than £100m. And that is before you factor in that losing new students has a multi-year impact.”

      He adds that he expects banks to offer UK universities loans where needed, given their significance in the economy. He warns, however: “I worked through the financial crisis of 2007/08 and it does not compare in my experience to what we are witnessing now – this crisis has touched everybody in some shape or form and many previously viable businesses are now in a fight for survival.”

      The Office for Students, the independent regulator of higher education, has already streamlined its rules in the wake of the crisis, calling for universities to sound the alarm if they fear they’ll run short of cash within 30 days.

      Universities UK, the industry body, has proposed a series of measures to the government to double research funding and offer emergency loans to troubled institutions, as well as placing a cap on the number of undergraduates many institutions can recruit in 2020-21.

      Nick Hillman, Hepi’s director, warned that universities only had limited options to cut their costs. “There are things they can do to mitigate the impact, such as doing all they can to ensure international students keep coming, pausing the development of their estates, doing less research, looking at their staffing and persuading home final-year students to stay on for postgraduate study. But some were in financial difficulties even before the current crisis.

      “If international student numbers are down a lot, we have a big problem. The ones with lots of international students could still potentially fill their places with home students (who pay lower fees) but that just leaves a problem lower down the tree.”

      https://www.theguardian.com/education/2020/apr/11/universities-brace-for-huge-losses-as-foreign-students-drop-out?CMP=Sha

      #universités #étudiants_étrangers #trésorerie

    • Another perfect storm? The likely financial impact of Covid-19 on the higher education sector – by Andrew Connors, the Head of Higher Education at Lloyds Bank

      It does not seem very long ago that those involved in the higher education sector talked about the perfect storm. The colliding forces were a consistent decline in the number of 18-year-olds in the UK, turbulence surrounding Brexit and the resulting potential impact on the number of EU students alongside the policy challenges of a minority government.

      As we entered 2020, however, if felt like the sector was weathering that storm with a majority government, certainty around the UK’s withdrawal from the EU and the number of UK 18-year-olds forecast to start growing again from 2021.

      All this has changed due to the impact of Covid-19, which has felt less like a perfect storm and more like a tsunami hitting the sector.

      Over a dynamic and fast-moving few weeks, higher education institutions have sent students home, moved to online tuition and, as the short and medium-term implications of Covid-19 become clearer, they have been assessing their immediate and ongoing liquidity requirements. The discussions we have been having at Lloyds Bank with institutions up and down the country suggest that a great wave of liquidity is likely to be necessary to support institutions through these most challenging of times.

      The UK’s higher education institutions are, though, facing into different challenges to much of the rest of UK Plc. Many sectors have been hit immediately and extremely hard by Covid-19 with trading halted and businesses closed overnight, necessitating workforce redundancies or furloughing.

      All UK banks are dealing with a significant and urgent volume of liquidity requests from their customers, the likes of which we have never seen before. To help meet these challenges the Government has made dramatic interventions to support companies in the form of the Job Retention Scheme (JRS), the Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme (CBILS), the Coronavirus Corporate Financing Facility (CCFF) and now the pending launch of the Coronavirus Large Business Interruption Loan Scheme (CLBILS)

      I worked through the financial crisis of 2007/08 and it does not compare in my experience to what we are witnessing now – this crisis has touched everybody in some shape or form and many previously viable businesses are now in a fight for survival.

      Financial Impacts

      The dynamics in the higher education sector are different to a lot of UK Plc. At Lloyds Bank we have not seen urgent requests for liquidity from the sector over recent weeks and nor would we expect to have given the crisis timeline looks very different to the one a large portion of companies are facing into.

      Yet, while the immediate impact we are seeing in the sector is slower, the overall impact of Covid-19 is potentially deeper and longer. The cost of lost commercial contracts in the summer alone is believed to be approaching £600 million and, as we look towards the 2020/21 academic year, annualised international student fee income of around £6 billion is at risk.

      Over the last few weeks, we have had many conversations with higher education institutions who know they will have a significant reduction in income over the summer term and are scenario planning potentially dramatic reductions in international students for 2020/21. That simply would not have been imagined a few short weeks ago.

      The discussions we are having suggest impacts on the current financial year that range from minimal to tens of millions of pounds for some institutions. Significant lost income has come from the waiving of accommodation fees for students for the summer term while many are committed to nomination agreements with other accommodation providers. Catering income alongside hotel and conferencing facility income have disappeared, with no expectation that summer schools will take place. This is likely to lead to some immediate cashflow implications for some, who will be carefully reviewing the Office for Students’ recent guidance around new reportable events, including the new short-term financial risk reporting requirement around the need for thirty days’ liquidity.

      As we look into the next academic year, the most significant concern is that potentially dramatic drop in international students. Many institutions are modelling reductions of between 80% and 100% in international student numbers. Every university we have spoken to expects to be impacted and for some the potential loss to income is projected to be greater than £100 million. And that is before you factor in that losing new students has a multi-year impact.

      Banks and Funding

      It is not surprising, therefore, that all universities are urgently looking at their short and medium-term liquidity needs. These discussions at Lloyds Bank have fallen into three buckets:

      Those looking to access one of the government schemes.
      Those looking for medium-term funding from their banks – most commonly three to five-year revolving credit facilities.
      Those looking to secure longer-term funding – through their banks – or more commonly the bond or private placement markets although this is less common at this time.

      Fortunately, given the wave of liquidity discussions we (and other banks) are having, the banks enter this crisis having transformed their balance sheets from 2007/08 driven by lessons learned and underlined by EU and government regulation.

      The banks have done this by repairing capital and liquidity ratios, transforming their loan to deposit ratios and significantly increasing their liquid assets. All this means that there should be plenty of liquidity available for UK Plc – and that is before adding in the recent cancellation of bank dividends and the impact of the Bank of England’s new term funding scheme.

      Given the significance of the higher education sector to the UK economy and its world-class track record, I would expect the sector to be able to access liquidity where needed. At Lloyds Bank our stated purpose is to ‘Help Britain Prosper’ and that’s just what we’re working to do with this sector.

      Government support

      What of the Government schemes? While the Government have, to date, made no specific announcements around support for the higher education sector, there are no obvious exclusions within the already announced schemes.

      To access the CCFF, for example, the Bank of England sets out the need to make a material contribution to the UK economy as being essential for access. At Lloyds we have been signposting those clients who wish to discuss access to the CCFF to the Bank of England. This has included confirming their Investment Grade credit rating, which is key to accessing the scheme.

      The newly-announced CLBILS scheme, likely to launch around the 20 April, could also be a real support to smaller higher education institutions who have a need for under £25 million of liquidity repayable over the medium term at preferential rates.

      We know a number of universities that are already using the Job Retention Scheme to furlough colleagues – particularly those with hotel and conferencing facilities.

      Lessons Learned

      Given the potential wave of support needed, it is clear that both the Government and financial sector have critical roles to play. For those like me with long memories, I have been reflecting on some lessons I learned from the actions the best companies took during the financial crisis of 2007/08 which I would sum up in the phrase: plan for the worst and hope for the best. That philosophy should lead to the following critical actions:

      Ensure you have timely and good quality financial information, including forecasts which should include a worst-case scenario alongside your base case. The test is to ask yourself, what would be the most severe outcome in every situation?
      Ensure you have sufficient liquidity in place to meet the downside risks.
      Seek professional advice where necessary.
      Be relentlessly challenging on expenditure and costs.
      At these times, you cannot over-communicate to colleagues and other key stakeholders, including your advisors and funders. Ensure your funders are invested in your institution and on the journey with you.
      And finally, some companies thrived during the financial crisis because, of course, even in the toughest of times there is opportunity. Be open to the opportunity to transform your operating model, to grow your people and to future proof your institution.

      There is no doubt that, by the time this Covid-19 outbreak is over, it will have had a significant impact – on individuals, on businesses and on society. But there is clear guidance and support available and never before in peacetime has it been truer that we are all in this together. For universities and businesses more generally, there is great commitment from government and lenders to do everything we can to help you navigate through the interruptions.

      We will get through this and, for those that need it, support is available to ensure higher education institutions emerge healthy.

      https://www.hepi.ac.uk/2020/04/12/another-perfect-storm-the-likely-financial-impact-of-covid-19-on-the-higher-

    • Here Come the Furloughs

      Sharp reductions in revenue and potential increases in expenses are spurring colleges to furlough or lay off employees while they wait for the coronavirus outbreak and the uncertainty it brings to subside.

      First came the hiring freezes. Now come the furloughs.

      Several colleges announced furloughs and layoffs this week and warned of potential additional staff reductions in the weeks to come. As colleges field unexpected expenses and lost revenue due to the coronavirus outbreak, paying employees — especially those who are unable to do their jobs remotely — is becoming more difficult.

      MaryAnn Baenninger, president of Drew University, announced via video message on Sunday that a group of about 70 employees would be furloughed through at least the end of May. A smaller group will be laid off permanently. Furloughed staff members were notified Monday.

      “I can’t guarantee that some of these furloughs won’t transition to permanent layoffs in the future,” Baenninger said in the video. According to the Drew website, furloughed employees will be updated by May 26 on the status of their furlough.

      Staff reductions had been on the table for weeks while the Drew virtual team — the group appointed to bring Drew online and weather the outbreak — considered how to balance the needs of the university and what was best for employees.

      The decision was, in part, an equity issue, Baenninger said.

      “There were people who were working harder than they ever worked … and there were people for whom we wanted to have work, but we didn’t,” she said.

      The financial picture Baenninger painted for Drew is similar to those at many other colleges and universities. She cited lost revenue from events, conferences, catering, summer camps and other operations, diminished endowment returns, and reduced giving from alumni and donors.

      “On the expense side,” she continued in the video, “we will need to be prepared for potential changes in student financial aid, likely increases in health insurance costs, and we have had significant unexpected increases transitioning to a virtual environment, responding to the myriad changes brought on by COVID-19 and the potential need if called upon by the state of New Jersey to prepare our campus to house first responders and displaced medical patients.”

      When colleges are forced to consider budget cuts, administrative costs such as travel and expense funds are typically the first to go, according to Ken Rodgers, director at S&P Global. Hiring freezes come next, which result in “a reasonable amount of savings,” he said. If that’s not enough, pay reductions, furloughs and layoffs become viable expense-saving options.

      Baenninger and her team are considering salary reductions.

      “We were pretty certain that salary reductions wouldn’t preclude a furlough, but maybe a furlough would prevent some salary reductions,” she said in an interview.

      Drew had already experienced financial struggles in recent years. But it is not alone in feeling increased pressure that forces furloughs amid the coronavirus.

      The University of New Haven — which is expecting a $12 million to $15 million in revenue loss due to issuing student refunds and credits — announced across-the-board pay reductions for faculty and staff two weeks ago. Last week, the university announced that some employees would be furloughed.

      Furloughs are sometimes used as defensive measures, Rodgers said. They can better position colleges should their financial situations get worse, “i.e., this fall, if it turns out that students, for whatever reason, don’t come back.”

      Guilford College in North Carolina has furloughed 133 people, more than half of its nonfaculty employees.

      “Many of the jobs that we were looking at were really the jobs that couldn’t be done from home, because they involved direct contact with students,” said Jane Fernandes, president of Guilford. “We decided that just to help — not to solve anything — but to help our budget get to the end of the year, we would furlough staff.”

      Marquette University announced Wednesday it would furlough approximately 250 employees beginning in mid-April. Bob Jones University, a private evangelical university in Greenville, S.C., also announced Wednesday that about 50 employees would be furloughed, with the potential for more down the road.

      The furloughs don’t appear to be cutting into faculty ranks at this time, although faculty numbers are likely to be affected by already announced hiring freezes, reductions in pay and other actions at colleges and universities around the country.

      The first round of furloughs and layoffs is typically operationally easier on colleges, Rodgers said.

      “Those initial layoffs and furloughs typically are — you have to be careful when you say this — not too difficult for the university to administer,” Rodgers said. “If you get into the situation where a lot of students choose not to come back to campus and you have to implement a more broad-based reduction, that would be more challenging for any university to implement … because then you have to cut into core programming.”

      Employees who work on campuses for third-party vendors that contract with colleges are also being laid off. Bon Appétit Management Company, which provides dining services to many colleges around the country, has furloughed many of its employees. Contract workers are not usually considered employees of the college they work at, and they face an uncertain future until students return to campus.

      Colleges are borrowing money to bolster their cash positions, but not to support recurring operations, including payroll, Rodgers said.

      “We view unfavorably any organization that borrows money to support recurring operations, including for payroll purposes,” he continued.

      June is likely to be a key decision point on future furloughs and layoffs, Rodgers said, because the June 30 end of the fiscal year will be approaching. Colleges will be working out their budgets for the new 2021 fiscal year.

      “They’re trying to see how this is going to impact their fiscal ’21 budget,” he said. “They’re having to make assumptions that may be very difficult to make as far as what enrollment to anticipate under scenario one, scenario two, scenario three.”

      https://insidehighered.com/news/2020/04/10/colleges-announce-furloughs-and-layoffs-financial-challenges-mount
      #USA #Etats-Unis