AU Global Gateway > OIE > ACIP/studyalabama > news > index.htm

StudyAlabama Home

International Education News Items

Selected news items will be posted on a monthly basis - choose the month of interest (first year 2006) current month can be found below:

Jan Feb Mar April May June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec

 Links to organizational newsletters and news sources

 

February 2006
February 25, 2006

NY Times

A Year Abroad (or 3) as a Career Move. By HILLARY CHURA
It was a few months before she was to graduate from Colgate University in 2002, but Lauren DiCioccio was not ready for the briefcase or the Brooks Brothers look. Brandon Steiner, a 2005 Virginia Tech graduate, teaching a class at a high school in Shizuoka Prefecture, southwest of Tokyo.  Know Before You Go (February 25, 2006) Armed with a bachelor's degree in art and art history, she did what an increasing number of college graduates are doing: she bought a plane ticket to a country she had never visited, backpacked around the region, got a job in that country and then traveled some more.

More at: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/25/business/worldbusiness/25abroad.html

February 25, 2006

NY Times

Know Before You Go
Those who need help in finding work overseas should know that some groups charge hefty placement fees. Determine whether the groups are covering room and board or are charging you just for the paperwork. Research will also uncover which programs require applications a year ahead of time and which accept only recent graduates.

Following are Web sites for job, volunteer and general information:

¶Bunac provides work permits (though not employment) and volunteer opportunities (www.bunac.org).

¶Dave's ESL Cafe lists teaching jobs (www.eslcafe.com/jobs). GoAbroad.com and Interexchange (www.interexchange.org/) also list foreign jobs.

More at: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/25/business/25side.html
 

February 24, 2006
Chronicle of Higher Education

Indian Scientist Finally Gets a U.S. Visa, After 'Degrading Experience' in American Consulate
By BURTON BOLLAG

The federal government has taken "exceptional measures" to grant a visa to a prominent Indian scientist whose difficulties in obtaining a visa this month caused outrage in India. U.S. officials scrambled to resolve the dispute before President Bush's first trip to India, which begins next week.

Goverdhan Mehta, a professor of organic chemistry, is a former director of the Indian Institute of Science, a leading center of research and graduate education in Bangalore, and is a science adviser to the Indian prime minister.

More at: this article, "Indian Scientist Finally Gets a U.S. Visa, After 'Degrading Experience' in American Consulate" is available online at this address for five days:
http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=GkFRGpqy9Jkt5Gzxjr8Hcqnsgcz4kygg (2/24/2006)

The article is always available to Chronicle subscribers at this address:
http://chronicle.com/daily/2006/02/2006022405n.htm

February 24, 2006
Chronicle of Higher Education

Professor Goodgrade. By Louise Churchill

This fall I gave my students grades for the first time. Of course, my students have received grades from me before, but I was always of the philosophy that those grades should be the ones they had earned. This semester, that changed. I began giving A's like gifts. Why? I need to get tenure.

More at: this article, "Professor Goodgrade" is available online at this address for up to five days:
http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=zPz5xpv8qYnQC6yPfwZ8fv9pdgcYbYQZ (2/24/2006)

The article is always available to Chronicle subscribers at this address:
http://chronicle.com/jobs/news/2006/02/2006022401c/careers.html

February 23, 2006
Chronicle of Higher Education

European Union's Plan for Technology Institute to Foster Research Gets Mixed Reception
By AISHA LABI

European Union's plan for technology institute to foster research gets mixed reception
The European Union unveiled plans on Wednesday to establish a European Institute of Technology that would foster research and innovation and help deter researchers and scientists from leaving Europe to work at institutions in North America and Asia.

European Union leaders have long been preoccupied with how to achieve those aims, and in 2000 they set the goal of becoming the "most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based economy in the world by 2010."

This article, "European Union's Plan for Technology Institute to Foster Research Gets Mixed Reception" is available online at this address:
http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=cybkKTHPdqQrpNfDJ6ywjgWCpNgNmxYn
This article will be available to non-subscribers of The Chronicle for up to five days after it is e-mailed. The article is always available to Chronicle subscribers at this address:
http://chronicle.com/daily/2006/02/2006022306n.htm
 

February 22, 2006
PPI Online

The Japan Postal Service is The World's Largest Bank

The Numbers:
Savings deposits at Japan Post: $1.7 trillion*
Savings deposits at all U.S. commercial banks: $5.9 trillion
Savings deposits at all other private banks, world**: $7.1 trillion

* Does not include $1.3 trillion in insurance assets.
** Excludes deposits in state-owned institutions like Japan Post or China's four state-owned banks.

What They Mean:
Each year, the world's families, businesses, and governments combine to put 22 percent of their income in the bank. Among rich countries, Japan is the largest saver: its savings rate is 28 percent of "gross national income." Europe's savings rate is about 21 percent, though Britain is quite low at 14.8 percent.

More at: Trade Fact of the Week | February 22, 2006
The Japan Postal Service is The World's Largest Bank

 

February 22, 2006
USA Today

Lenovo to offer first branded PCs out of China
By Michelle Kessler, USA TODAY
SAN FRANCISCO — No. 3 PC-maker Lenovo plans to introduce itself to the world Thursday by launching the first Lenovo-branded PCs outside China.

"Lenovo then had to merge two staffs that didn't speak the same language and were on opposite sides of the world. The combined company's first CEO, former IBM executive Stephen Ward, left in December after 12 months in part because he had trouble connecting with the Chinese, says technology analyst Roger Kay at Endpoint Technologies Associates. Lenovo said former Dell senior vice president William Amelio, an executive with more experience in Asia, was a better fit to help the company grow."

Click the following to access the sent link: USATODAY.com - Lenovo to offer first branded PCs out of China*

 

February 22, 2006
USA Today

Students suffocate under tens of thousands in loans
By Sandra Block, USA TODAY
Tom Dillon, 19, a pre-pharmacy major at the University of Connecticut, is carrying $52,000 in student loans. And he's just getting started. When he gets his pharmacy doctorate in four years, he expects his debt to exceed $150,000. Dillon's been drawn to pharmacy since age 5, when he found out he had epilepsy.

Click the following to access the article: USATODAY.com - Students suffocate under tens of thousands in loans*

February 20, 2006
Chronicle of Higher Education

In Mysterious Case, U.S. Withholds Visa From Bolivian Scholar Hired to Teach at U. of Nebraska
By BURTON BOLLAG

A Bolivian scholar hired by the University of Nebraska at Lincoln has been unable to take up his post because the federal government has withheld his visa. The case has again raised concerns of what critics have described as the arbitrary use of government power to keep foreign academics out of the United States.

Waskar T. Ari, a member of Bolivia's largest indigenous group, earned a Ph.D. in history from Georgetown University in 2005 and was hired by Nebraska as an assistant professor of history and ethnic studies. His job was to have begun last August.

More at: "In Mysterious Case, U.S. Withholds Visa From Bolivian Scholar Hired to Teach at U. of Nebraska" is available online at this address: http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=xhpkxMcw8wksT6pWj9hcnqZbjqpskWM8

This article will be available to non-subscribers of The Chronicle for up to five days after it is e-mailed. The article is always available to Chronicle subscribers at this address:
http://chronicle.com/daily/2006/02/2006022004n.htm
 

February 20, 2006
Washington Post

Reference Tool On Web Finds Fans, Censors

By Philip P. Pan

BEIJING -- When access to Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia that anyone can edit, was disrupted across China last October, a lanky chemical engineer named Shi Zhao called his Internet service provider to complain. A technician confirmed what Shi already suspected: Someone in the government... To...

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/02/19/AR2006021901335.html?referrer=emailarticle

February 20, 2006

SOUTHERN COMPASS

 

RESEARCH TRIANGLE REGIONAL PARTNERSHIP UNVEILS NEW INTERNATIONAL STRATEGY
The 13-county Research Triangle Regional Partnership (RTRP) in North Carolina, one of seven state-designated regions, just added an international dimension to its regional strategic plan, known as Staying on Top. The international strategy calls for aligning the region’s existing organizations and resources with international commerce—investment, trade, research, exchange and relationships—to remain competitive. RTRP already provides substantial support to the International Affairs Council (which manages delegations) and the World Trade Center of North Carolina. Co-location of services is also a key feature. One of RTRP’s corporate partners, Longistics, is home to the foreign trade zones, World Trade Center of North Carolina, the U.S. Department of Commerce Export Assistance Center, and the brand new North Carolina China Center. (Lenovo, formerly a division of IBM in the Research Triangle Park, is China’s largest investment in the United States. Notably, America’s single largest investor in China is Charlotte-based Bank of America, which acquired a gigantic construction related company to cash in on China’s phenomenal building frenzy.) Universities and community colleges are also a key feature of RTRP’s international strategy. Higher education brings expertise, contacts, training capacity and prowess in entrepreneurship; these institutions will increase the region’s global knowledge, brand recognition and attractiveness. RTRP has hired Doug F. Aitkin to direct its international strategy. Aitkin brings years of international business development experience, including work on renewable energy projects in developing countries. For more information, contact RTRP at (919) 840-7372 or visit www.researchtriangle.org .
 

February, 2006
Global Health Education Consortium

PROFESSIONALISM 101

In line with this discussion, Child Family Health International has recently been promoting discussion in the global health study abroad realm about "professionalism". We've put together a publication for our students that you might be interested in reading. The Global Health Education
Consortium (GHEC) has published it on their website: http://www.globalhealth-ec.org/GHEC/Resources/Newsletter/Vol1Issue1/Fea_Pro101.htm

This publication is obviously geared toward students going abroad to study health sciences, but I think the premise is universal. A large part of why CFHI felt it was necessary to start talking more about professionalism for study abroad students is because of our increase in numbers (15 in 1998 to an expected 700 in 2006), and corresponding affects on the communities that host our students. Providing students with a quality study abroad experience is just as important as managing the way that a growing number of students behave while in those countries. That, to CFHI, has been a
bigger challenge than providing quality experiences.
 

February 17, 2006
Washington Post

In China's Frontier, a Fortune Is Made. By Peter S. Goodman

BAOTOU, China -- The Communist Party officials who run this grimy steel town on the grasslands of Inner Mongolia had big ambitions but little finance. So they called in one of China's most successful capitalists, Yan Jiehe, and let him handle almost everything.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/02/16/AR2006021602515.html?referrer=emailarticle
 

February 17, 2006
Chronicle of Higher Education

The Wild, Wild East. Foreign universities flock to China, but are there riches to be made, or just fool's gold?

The past few years have seen explosive growth in the number of foreign colleges and universities that have poured into China.

The country first opened its doors to such ventures in 1995. Today more than 700 foreign academic programs operate here, according to the International Finance Corporation, an arm of the World Bank. American institutions — ranging from large publics such as the University of Maryland to smaller private colleges such as Lakeland College, in Sheboygan, Wis. — are leading the charge, with more than 150 programs. Australia, Britain, Canada, Japan, and Singapore also have a visible presence here. 

Available online at this address:
http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=TpkKxXTmsvzySXntkTycyxgj4tVrvhkf  (2/13/2006)

This article will be available to non-subscribers of The Chronicle for up to five days after it is e-mailed. The article is always available to Chronicle subscribers at this address:
http://chronicle.com/weekly/v52/i24/24a04601.htm
 

February 17, 2006
Chronicle of Higher Education

America's Hot New Export: Higher Education. Colleges rush to open degree programs overseas, for both academic and business reasons. By BURTON BOLLAG

When he started as vice provost for international education, in 1989, Stephen C. Dunnett's main responsibility was to make sure that foreign students at the State University of New York at Buffalo were adjusting to life in America and doing well academically. But in recent years his job has changed. Not only has Mr. Dunnett begun to recruit students abroad — he is also developing overseas degree programs for foreign students who cannot, or will not, come to the United States

Available online at this address:
http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=X2twdWdRrpnqSWSKBdhPFDmtzStnmQyz  (2/13/20006)

This article will be available to non-subscribers of The Chronicle for up to five days after it is e-mailed. The article is always available to Chronicle subscribers at this address:
http://chronicle.com/weekly/v52/i24/24a04401.htm
 

February 16, 2006
Chronicle of Higher Education

5 American Colleges Win Awards That Laud Them for Their International Focus.  By EUGENE MCCORMACK.

Five colleges have won this year's Senator Paul Simon Award for Campus Internationalization, in recognition of their efforts to expand their focus beyond America's borders. Available online at this
address: http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=PmvgMZgQcJf8VhmnDSYYj589QwFbfsHk (2/16/2006)

This article will be available to non-subscribers of The Chronicle for up to five days after it is e-mailed. The article is always available to Chronicle subscribers at this address:
http://chronicle.com/daily/2006/02/2006021605n.htm
 

February 15, 2006
BBC News

** Call for pupils to learn Mandarin **
Pupils should be taught other languages such as Mandarin in school, a report for the British Council says.  The current dominance of the English language poses "serious" economic and political disadvantages for the UK, the study claims.  UK graduates who speak only English will lose out to multi-lingual workers from other countries, the council says.

The complete article can be found at:
< http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/fr/-/1/hi/education/4715742.stm  >

*College makes Chinese compulsory (article January 16, 2006)*

Brighton College has a Pre-Prep, Prep and Senior school
An independent college is becoming the first in Britain to make Mandarin Chinese a compulsory subject.
The move at Brighton College, in East Sussex, was said to reflect China's position as the fastest-growing economy in the world.

Mandarin Chinese will join French, Spanish and Latin as a core language for 13 to 18-year-old pupils.

The complete article can be found at:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/southern_counties/4616640.stm
 

February 14, 2006
USINFO DOS

U.S. To Issue Student Visas 120 Days Ahead of Start of Classes
Measure part of Rice-Chertoff joint vision on secure borders, open doors

The United States has extended the length of time foreign students may be issued student visas, and will issue student visas up to 120 days before classes begin, as compared to 90 days under previous regulations, the State Department announced February 14.

Under the new regulations, students applying for initial-entry F-1 (academic student), F-2 (spouse or child of F-1) and M-1 (vocational training) and M-2 (spouse or child of M-1) visas now may be issued those visas up to 120 days before their academic program start date. MORE...
 

February 14, 2006
Chronicle of Higher Education

Helping American Colleges Confront Foreign Competition Is Crucial to National Security, Warner Says. By PAUL FAIN

The increasing international competition faced by American higher education should be described as a matter of national security, Mark R. Warner, a former governor of Virginia and a presumed candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, told college administrators on Monday at the American Council on Education's annual meeting.

Available online at this address:
http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=jPZmmt55JqGVQxrpydnnDgbRQSjwxvqG (2/15/06)

This article will be available to non-subscribers of The Chronicle for up to five days after it is e-mailed. The article is always available to Chronicle subscribers at this address:
http://chronicle.com/daily/2006/02/2006021402n.htm
 

February 14, 2006

SOUTHERN COMPASS

NSF LAUNCHES INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH & EDUCATION PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM

The National Science Foundation recently announced a new program that seeks to facilitate research partnerships between U.S. scientists and engineers and their international colleagues. Funded under the Partnership for International Research and Education program (PIRE), the program also has an educational focus that includes using technology for distance education and virtual laboratories for college students and post-docs. The program also has funds for incorporating research findings into K-12 activities such as research internships for high school students. More about the PIRE project appears at http://www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id=12819

NEW INITIATIVES CONNECTING SOUTHERN STATES WITH ASIA
Connecting with Asia is a top priority for many southern states this year. North Carolina will soon open a privately funded China Center that will be co-located with the U.S. Department of Commerce, World Trade Center of North Carolina and a large freight management company. The Chinese Ambassador will also be touring the U.S., including several stops in the South. South Carolina and Alabama have major trade missions planned to China, and Oklahoma recently got a major grant to expand its already aggressive Chinese outreach efforts in education and business. It would be helpful to collect a list of these developments so others can inquire about them or simply track developments. The Asia Society can make it possible through its website, which already serves as a single-stop portal for all kinds of news and information. They encourage organizations, museums, publishers, and publicists to submit information on their upcoming events at http://www.asiasource.org/events/ae_mp_04.cfm . You can also subscribe to weekly emails that will alert you to upcoming events in your region of choice. See http://www.asiasource.org

RESEARCH & INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION KEY TO U.S. COMPETITIVENESS
According to the latest edition of Issues in Science and Technology, U.S. researchers will need new skills that allow them to collaborate across international borders. The authors studied engineering research centers across the U.S. and found, among other things, that they have failed to recognize key structural shifts in the global economy. The U.S. can no longer strive to be 'number one' in all research areas. Instead, it must assume a more collaborative stance as knowledge is increasingly diffused around the world. The authors of the article recommend that training in global "collaboration and communication" become a central part of all science and engineering training. They also support more open scientific exchange across borders as well as immigration policies that allow more open circulation of researchers and scientific talent. The research can be found at: http://www.kauffman.org/pdf/collaborative_advantage_12_05.pdf The engineering school at Washington University in St. Louis is forging a fascinating partnership with its business school, with the goal of fostering innovation and global competitiveness. For an informal, two-page description of this program, email cconway@southern.org
 

February 14, 2006
Inside Higher

Brain Drain Is Not Inevitable.  By Joan Dassin

“Brain drain” — the migration of highly trained people from developing countries to wealthy ones — has for decades depleted the most precious resource of the world’s poorest countries, their skilled and educated citizens. Yet this outflow of talent is not inevitable. Ending brain drain ultimately requires new development models that redress fundamental inequalities within developing countries and between the world’s poorest and richest nations. But as a first step, colleges and universities that recruit foreign talent — and the foundations and agencies that support them — can adopt new policies to help stem pervasive brain drain.  More...

 

February 14, 2006
Inside Higher Education

Capacity and Quality
Enrollments are booming, but the government can’t find money to pay for new universities. Lawmakers want to know if taxpayers are getting value in their higher education systems while colleges fear excessive regulation. Private higher education — much of it from for-profit entities — is growing rapidly, and facing skepticism from traditional providers of higher education.  More....

February 10, 2006 AID

Americans for Informed Democracy is so excited that you are interested in organizing a town hall meeting in your community! We believe that hosting a town hall meeting is the best way to bring a diverse group of Americans together to discuss the U.S. role in the world. For the spring of 2006, AID has six exciting town hall initiatives. More

February 10, 2006
Chronicle of Higher Education

Slackers Need Not Apply. An intensive study-abroad program immerses Americans in South Indian culture. By SHAILAJA NEELAKANTAN, Chennai, India

Kalaimamani Subramaniya Thambirar, a master of a traditional South Indian form of street theater called therukoothu, wears a pensive look as he inspects his unusual group of performers. Normally Mr. Thambirar leads a troupe of artists who perform at theater festivals around India and the world, but this afternoon he is producing a performance of an episode from the Mahabharata — one of India's most famous epics — with a group of American college students.

Available online at this address:
http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=WrqnTCMpxFfFp9bkZpSvxffFwzDfcnPY
for up to five days after it is e-mailed (2/6/06) The article is always available to Chronicle subscribers at this address: http://chronicle.com/weekly/v52/i23/23a03601.htm
 

February 9, 2006
CED

CED URGES INCREASED INVESTMENT IN INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION AND FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDIES.  Business-led group warns of economic and national security
implications of U.S. language gap WASHINGTON, D.C., February 9, 2006 – The United States will become less competitive in the global economy because of a shortage of strong foreign language and international studies programs at the elementary, high school and college levels, warns a new statement from the Committee for Economic Development (CED), a business-led policy group. The CED statement, Education for Global Leadership: The Importance of International Studies and
Foreign Language Education for U. S. Economic and National Security,... More, Report
 

February 9, 2006
USA TODAY

U.S. firms becoming tongue-tie. By David J. Lynch, USA TODAY
As the Bush administration promotes its new imitative to keep the United States competitive in a globalized world, it's worth noting this fact: Only one of the men running the five largest U.S. corporations is fluent in any language other than English.  More....

Importance of USA's Global Trade on the Rise (CHART by US State)

February 8, 2006
PPI Trade Facts

Seventy Percent of the World's Cocoa Comes from West Africa.  The Numbers:
Annual world production of cocoa: 3.3 million tons
Annual world exports of cocoa beans: $2.5 billion
Annual world exports of chocolate: $7 billion
More details including reference reading

SECUSS-L
Posting

The Project for Learning Abroad, Training and Outreach (PLATO) is an integrated study abroad training, certification, and diversity outreach program.

As a part of the PLATO Project, we've listed 10 reasons for students from African-American, Hispanic-American, Native American, and Asian/Pacific Islander Backgrounds to study abroad.  You can find them at:    http://www.globaled.us/plato/diversity.html

 FEBRUARY 7, 2006 SOUTHERN COMPASS

KENTUCKY WINS PRIZE FOR EXCELLENCE IN INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION

The Asia Society picked Kentucky as one of its six 2005 winners in a competition for the Goldman Sachs Foundation Prizes for Excellence in International Education. Kentucky was recognized for its 2003 Governor Summit on International Education (triggered by Southern Growth) that led to a strategic plan and great progress in the last two years. This year it launched the Kentucky Virtual International High School that will allow students from any public school to receive an international diploma while still enrolled in their regular school. It has also signed an MOU with the Chinese Ministry of Education to create a virtual Chinese course, and expand Chinese language and cultural professional development activities statewide. The state has also expanded support to internationalize ten model elementary schools, and has integrated international topics into ongoing intensive Teacher Academies. Profiles of the winners can be seen at http://www.internationaled.org/prizes/2005.winners.htm . A 2005 report profiling 17 states’ initiatives—six of them Southern—can be viewed at http://www.internationaled.org/statespreparefortheglobalage.htm .

Upcoming state events can also be listed at http://www.asiasource.org/events/ae_mp_01.cfm
 

 FEBRUARY 7, 2006 SOUTHERN COMPASS

HISPANIC POPULATION GROWTH BALANCES LONG-TERM LOSS IN RURAL AMERICA
Hispanic population growth has helped to slow long-term population loss in rural America, points out a new publication from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service. Rural Hispanics at a Glance discusses these growth trends and also provides a snapshot of Hispanics living in nonmetro counties. Highlights include data on demographics, income, poverty, and labor market and social service indicators. The easy-to-read format incorporates text bullets, along with charts and maps, in a six-page brochure. Download the brochure at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Publications/EIB8/
 

FEBRUARY 7, 2006 SOUTHERN COMPASS

 

NEW USAID GRANTS AIMED AT INVOLVING U.S. HIGHER EDUCATION IN INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT.  According to USAID, more faculty from U.S. colleges, universities and community colleges need to participate in international development. In an unusual move, it has joined with the UK’s Higher Education Staff Development Agency (HED) to issue an RFA called the New IDEAS Partnership Program. Unlike other USAID programs, this one allows institutions to propose their own partnership program, anywhere and on any topic, as long as it: (a) involves a USAID country and its development issues; (b) strengthens the grantee’s capacity to do future development work, and (c) demonstrate unique or exceptionally innovative approaches and ideas. HED anticipates making ten awards of up to $125,000 each over a three-year period, contingent on USAID funding. The deadline is April 25, 2006. More information, including the RFA, is available on the HED website:
http://www.aascu.org/ALO/RFPs/newIDEAS/newIDEAS06.htm.
 

FEBRUARY 7, 2006 SOUTHERN COMPASS

ARTICLE PROPOSES LINKING SCIENCE & ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN U.S. SCHOOLS

The fact that China is producing far more engineers and scientists than the U.S. is often cited as a major competitive threat, but perhaps it is more important to focus on getting our own kids enthusiastic about math and science, and to resist the impulse to exclude foreign talent. This is the view recently expressed by Carl Shramm and Robert Litan of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. Reforming immigration policy is only half the story. In the long run, more American youth need to choose technical careers. They suggest doing this by establishing a link between science and entrepreneurship in the schools. Their article, "Foreign Students Who Study Engineering Deserve Citizenship," was published in Inc. Magazine, October 2005. The full text can be found at http://www.inc.com/magazine/20051001/currency.html .
 

February 6, 2006
US Dept. of Education

American Competitiveness Initiative (ACI) - President Bush's 2006 education agenda, the American Competitiveness Initiative, aims to strengthen innovation and education in the U.S. by improving mathematics and science education, foreign language studies, and high schools.

Meeting the Challenge of a Changing World: Strengthening Education for the 21st Century

February 6, 2006
Chronicle of Higher Education

"Colleges Should Collaborate With Industry and Embrace Change, Speakers Tell National Panel"
If colleges hope to succeed in the changing economy, they must team up with industry and embrace new technologies, panelists told the Secretary of Education's Commission on the Future of Higher Education on Friday.  The commission, which met for two days here to discuss "innovation," now heads to Seattle for a public hearing on Tuesday.  During Friday's first session, on "innovative public/private sector models," speakers stressed the importance of working with businesses to provide internships.

Available online at this address:
http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=szgKngcqpfh6jzQwjWpfsZQmcCvvZ8Th
This article will be available to non-subscribers of The Chronicle for up to five days after it is e-mailed(2/6/06) The article is always available to Chronicle subscribers at this
address: http://chronicle.com/daily/2006/02/2006020601n.htm

February 3, 2006 IIE Interactive

StudyAbroadFunding.org: Add Your Scholarships and Grants
IIE is pleased to announce StudyAbroadFunding.org, a new online directory with detailed information on hundreds of scholarships, grants, and fellowships available for undergraduate and graduate study, and doctoral and post-doctoral research outside of the United States. The website will officially launch in Spring 2006, but you may already add or update your scholarship or grant online.  http://filemaker.edudirectories.com/sabfunding/fundingmenu.php

February 3, 2006
Chronicle of Higher Education

"American Colleges Must Change to Compete in the Global Economy, Speakers Tell Panel on Future of Higher Education"

A PANEL CHARGED WITH devising a "comprehensive national strategy" on higher education's future met for a third time on Thursday. Leaders of industry and education recommended that American colleges change the way they deliver their courses, manage their finances, and prepare students to compete in the global economy.  --> SEE http://chronicle.com/daily/2006/02/2006020302n.htm

http://chronicle.com/weekly/v52/i21/21b01701.htm  (avail 5 days from 2/05/06)

February 3, 2006
Chronicle of Higher Education

"Freshman Survey: More Students Plan to Lend a Hand"

FRESH HELP In an annual survey of college freshmen, two-thirds say it is important to aid people in need, and 83 percent say they volunteered at least occasionally during their senior year of
high school. --> SEE http://chronicle.com/weekly/v52/i22/22a04001.htm

http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=sMbxbBCnMyhvq6RpvQstp3YHt4Jx6bYp  (avail 5 days from 2/05/06)

February 3, 2006
Chronicle of Higher Education

"Record Share of College Freshmen Plan to Volunteer, and Their Political Involvement Is Up, Survey
Finds"

TWO OUT OF THREE COLLEGE FRESHMEN regard it as essential or very important to help others who are in difficulty, the highest percentage in a quarter-century. That was among the findings released on Wednesday by an institute of the University of California at Los Angeles that conducts a national survey of incoming freshmen.    --> SEE http://chronicle.com/daily/2006/01/2006012603n.htm 

http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=Bb9SxgnzrdnjQzzkffkc8fQdpwrnDBPw  (avail 5 days from 2/05/06)

February 1, 2006
Inside Higher Education

Passage to India.
Can’t find your president on campus? You might try looking in Delhi. For a variety of economic, political and educational reasons, leaders of American colleges are finding it increasingly worth their time to visit India, where they are trying to attract more students, negotiate distance learning agreements, set up joint ventures and raise money. More....
 

January, 2006 SOUTHERN COMPASS

ARTICLE PROPOSES LINKING SCIENCE & ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN U.S. SCHOOLS

The fact that China is producing far more engineers and scientists than the U.S. is often cited as a major competitive threat, but perhaps it is more important to focus on getting our own kids enthusiastic about math and science, and to resist the impulse to exclude foreign talent. This is the view recently expressed by Carl Shramm and Robert Litan of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. Reforming immigration policy is only half the story. In the long run, more American youth need to choose technical careers. They suggest doing this by establishing a link between science and entrepreneurship in the schools. Their article, "Foreign Students Who Study Engineering Deserve Citizenship," was published in Inc. Magazine, October 2005. The full text can be found at http://www.inc.com/magazine/20051001/currency.html .
 

January 31, 2006
Engineering&

More Engineering Deficit Mythology
In the ongoing debate over the impact of offshoring on the American workforce, BusinessWeek notes a new study arguing that the engineering deficit may be a myth. more....

January 23, 3006
NAFSA News

New Survey: U.S. Public Calls for Leadership in International Education A recently released nationwide survey found that the U.S. public overwhelmingly believes in the importance of international education and the need to prepare future generations for success in a global society. Regardless of demographic background, the U.S. public echoed staunch support for the importance of learning about other countries and cultures, studying abroad, opportunities to interact with international students, and learning languages Read more...

December 16, 2005
Inside Higher

Graduated but Not Literate
It’s hardly shocking that a new federal report on adult literacy finds that the more formal education Americans have, the better they do on tests that measure practical literacy. “The National Assessment of Adult Literacy,” released Thursday by the Education Department’s National Center for Education Statistics, shows that citizens with a college education were significantly better able than their peers to understand and analyze the information they confront in their everyday lives. So, as Grover J. (Russ) Whitehurst, director of the Institute for Education Sciences, put it at a new conference Thursday: “Education works — that’s a good thing.  More at: http://insidehighered.com/news/2005/12/16/literacy
 

posted 01/06/2006, rev. 02/26/2006 03:48:14 PM

 

   ACIP Home Page    *     contact us