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Foreign students being exploited in Victoria, Australia

Nearly 60% of international students in Victoria could be receiving below minimum wage rates, a study by Monash and Melbourne university academics has revealed.

Interviews with 200 international students drawn from nine universities across Victoria revealed that up to 58.1% of students surveyed were paid below $15 an hour, with 33.9% receiving less than $10 an hour.

The results from a $3 million Australian Research Council-funded study come just a month after hundreds of taxi drivers, many of whom were students from India, protested against conditions in their industry outside Flinders Street station.

The study also found:

■ International students are often pressured to take jobs not wanted by domestic workers.

■ At least a third work more than the 20 hours allowed under study visas, forcing them to take jobs 'off the books' with no industrial relations protection.

■ The influx of international students working outside industrial relations controls adversely affects overall conditions in the workforce.

■ The problems started in 1991 when international students rights in the workplace were narrowly defined as the 'right to work' by the federal government.

One of the academics involved in the study, Professor Chris Nyland, yesterday told The Age he was happy there were signs the Victorian Government was developing policy options. But he hit out at the Federal Government for its 'protracted' reply.

'The Rudd Government has shown no sign of recognising this as an issue,' Professor Nyland said. 'There was a 94-page higher education discussion document (from the Rudd Government) that was issued. I have gone through that and there is lots of references to international education, lots of references to international student fees, nothing in there about international student welfare.'

The office of acting Prime Minister Julia Gillard

Plus Two exams in for overhaul in Orissa

Faced with widespread criticism over poor performance of students in the Plus Two examinations -2008, the State Higher Education Department finally decided to go for overhaul in preparation of questions and its pattern from the next session.

The Council of Higher Secondary Education (CHSE), Orissa, was asked to bring about certain reforms and constitute moderate question boards for each subject, State Higher Education Minister Samir Dey said here on Monday.

'Earlier a retired professor was entrusted with framing questions for a particular paper. However, retired professors were not able to keep track of frequent changes in syllabus.
Henceforward, a moderate question board comprising of five experience teachers would frame the questions,' Dey said.

After boards were put in place, there would be scope for instant corrections of questions, he said. 'The teachers, who will have comprehensive knowledge about syllabus and question patterns being followed by the Central Board of Secondary Education, New Delhi, will be taken in the board.'

Guidelines

'We will give more emphasis on objective type questions. Step-marking methods would be reassessed to create scopes for students to score good marks in the examinations,' the Higher Education Minister said.

Among others, the CHSE would introduce internal assessment tests in every two months for Plus Two students across the State.

'We will issue formal guidelines to all junior colleges making bi-monthly tests compulsory. It will keep the students on their toes and enable them to compete CBSE students at national level,' Dey said.

The marks secured by students from internal assessment tests would be reflected in their final results and a detail procedure was being worked out, he said.

In the science stream, the pass percentage dipped by 15 points since 2006. Similarly, students of the commerce and arts stream though put up slender improvements compared to 2007 examinations, the performance was below the results of 2006.

The CHSE was recently perturbed with the raging controversy on poor performance of students in mathematics.

While parents blamed the faulty selection of questions, a sizeable section of academicians held the deteriorating standards for the situation.

Dey said syllabus would undergo constant reforms as well as emphasis placed on teachers' training to keep pace with improving standard of education at the national level as well as in other States.


NCERT to make Home Science practical-oriented

The National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) has introduced several new practical-oriented experiments for Home Science students this year.

According to an official at the Department of Women Studies (DWS), NCERT, Dr Sushma Jaireth, 'The practical experiments in the subject are contemporary and will reflect the use of new technology and applications. These practicals have been designed in a manner to foster critical thinking.'

The Class XI textbooks currently contain units on adolescence, family, community and society, childhood and adulthood, growth of moustache and beard, change of voice, colour of hair and eyes developmental norms, garment size, emotional and cognitive changes, diet, health and fitness, communication skills and technology .

The new experiments will include developing a time-plan for self, recording own emotions in different contexts in a day and reflecting 'why' on these emotions and ways of handling them, recording five messages from print and electronic media that influences the student, accumulating information on food practices, food taboos, fasting and festivity preparations, clothing practices related to rites, rituals and occupation.

According to another official at the NCERT, 'The new proposed practicals will include day-to-day situation in families such as five agreements and disagreements with his/her mother, father, siblings, friends and teachers and how to resolve the disagreements to reach a state of harmony and peace. The textbook on the other hand will include gender-sensitivity, respect for diversity and plurality with regard to rural-urban-tribal location, caste, class, value for both traditional and modern influences, concern for society and pride in national symbols.'

Education far from crowded; to see more deals

It's not just Arvind Sodhani, the chief of Intel Capital, who's a big believer in the potential of education in India emerging as a big business in the coming years. Other venture funds such as Lightspeed India, Capital18 and Ojas Venture Partners, to name a few, are keen to invest in a business that might seem getting crowded.

Cyrus Driver, Director, Helix Investments, an India-focused fund, lists three promising parts in the business: school tutorials; IIT JEE (the joint entrance exam to the Indian Institutes of Technology, the country's premier network of engineering schools) and various state and local board exam preparation coaching centres; and vocational and soft skills training, which he describes as the largest segment in the overall business, estimated at some US$40 billion (INR 1.72 trillion) by CLSA Asia Pacific.

Helix Investments made a US$12 million investment in Mumbai-based school tutorial, Mahesh Tutorials Pvt. Ltd late last year, after which the incubatee firm has made acquisitions and expanded its network from Maharashtra to eight other states. Driver says his firm hopes to announce a new deal with an education company by the year-end.

The core market for education services in India, particularly schools and colleges, is highly regulated and intended to be run on a not-for-profit basis, thus keeping venture capitalists (VCs) away. But supplementary and tertiary segments, though fragmented, offer benefits of potential scale in a country where families spend up to 20% of disposable incomes on education.

Last week's Intel Capital funding of education assessment firm Vriti Infocom followed a raft of similar deals earlier. Blackstone Group, New Vernon Private Equity and Deutsche Securities pooled INR 94 crore into Chennai-based e-learning firm Everonn Systems India Ltd in May and earlier this year KPCB (Kleiner Perkins Caufield and Byers) and Sherpalo Ventures funded education portal StudyPlaces.com. Earlier venture fund rounds in the sector were at Bangalore's TutorVista Global Pvt. Ltd, Mumbai e-learning services firm 24×7 Learning Solutions Pvt. Ltd, New Delhi-based exam preparation tutorial Career Launcher India Ltd, Hurix Systems Pvt. Ltd and Educational Initiatives Pvt. Ltd, among others.

Will there still be more investments in the business? 'There will be lots of deals. This is a fast growing sector with high profit margins,' says Driver of Helix Investments.
Still, the kinds of start-ups likely to get backed in education could be different from the ones that got funded so far. 'We are exploring the segment in education that leverages technology

Teachers’ group: 12-yr education plan ‘unrealistic’

A teachers' advocate said proposals to add two more years to the current 10-year basic education cycle in the country is unrealistic since the problem lies not in the years but the increasing number of children who are out of school.

Antonio Tinio, president of the Alliance of Concerned Teachers, said Tuesday that instead of focusing on the proposal, the government should find ways on how to solve the rising number of out-of-school youths.

'The government should solve this problem. It should find ways on how to convince students to remain in school and encourage them to graduate under the 10-year basic education cycle,' he told ABS-CBN.

Tinio said 3.3 million children aged six to 15 are out of school. He said the number is 78% bigger than the 1.8 million children who were out of school in 2001.

He said the 12-year basic education proposal would only be feasible if the country's economy has improved.

Meanwhile, Education Secretary Jesli Lapus supported Tinio's opinion, saying that the proposal will be implemented depending on the availability of funds.

'In principle, [the proposal] is good but only with enough funds,' Lapus said.

Lapus said the additional two years in the basic education cycle means four million additional students. More students would mean additional teachers and textbooks.

'It shows that we're still lagging with the current 10 years [of basic education],' the education chief said.

Lapus said he supports the proposal but instead of adding two more years in the intermediate and secondary levels, the government should add from below.

Lapus proposed an additional kindergarten level in public schools to help children prepare for Grade 1. 'What we're pushing is more urgent, add another level for kindergarten.'

He said students in the early grade levels of 1, 2 and 3 have a 20% dropout rate, which he said can be addressed by a 'readiness' programme.

Statements from Tinio and Lapus came as President Arroyo formed the Presidential Task Force on Education headed by Father Bienvenido Nebres of the Ateneo de Manila University to look into the proposal.

Rochester Institute of Technology to set up campus at Dubai Silicon Oasis

Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum, Chairman of Dubai Silicon Oasis Authority, signed an exclusive agreement with Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) – US, one of the world's leading universities in the field of microelectronics, to establish a campus at the Dubai Silicon Oasis, the region's leading integrated innovations hub for high-tech industries.

The agreement was signed with Dr William W Destler, President of RIT, in the presence of Sheikh Nahyan bin Mubarak Al Nahyan, Minister for Higher Education and Scientific Research.
The agreement establishes RIT Dubai as a world-class university with an unwavering commitment to academic excellence. The University will start operations in August this year.

Dubai Silicon Oasis allocated around 3 million sqft of land for the development of a fully fledged Academic Complex comprising the university campus, an academic centre, dormitory, and recreational facilities for students and the faculty. Furthermore, RIT will provide academic content, oversee the management of the university, and provide its internationally recognised and certified degrees. What is worth mentioning is that the development of RIT Dubai will undergo two phases; the first will offer Masters Degrees at the DSOA Headquarters, while the second will offer Bachelors degrees within the university campus in the silicon Oasis.

Commenting on this initiative, Al Maktoum said, 'The region is rapidly advancing towards a knowledge-based economy and affiliations with reputed international academic institutions will considerably benefit the UAE. As our fast developing economy gears up to face more challenges, the fundamental role of technology in every sector assumes greater significance.'

'RIT's presence in the hi-tech park in Dubai will significantly add to the strength and diversity of Dubai's higher educational sector, while facilitating the creation of a skilled pool of talented professionals, especially within the field of technology.'

Located within the DSO premises, RIT Dubai will initially cater to full-time employees looking to pursue their master degree. Courses will be offered in various disciplines within the fields of Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Networking Security and Systems Administration, Human Resource Development, Finance, Project Management, Computer Information Assurance, and Service Leadership and Innovation.

Furthermore, RIT Dubai is expected to offer undergraduate programs to full-time students in a variety of fields similar to those being offered at the graduate level.

Dr Mohammed Al Zarouni, Vice Chairman and CEO of DSOA, said, 'We are delighted to sign this agreement with RIT, especially with Education being a core aspect of our value proposition. DSO is confident that RIT Dubai will directly contribute towards creating next generation professionals equipped with the skills to meet stringent industry demands. This will definitely contribute to the emirate's objective to grow into a full-fledged knowledge-based economy by 2015, as envisioned in the Dubai Strategic Plan.'

Dr Destler said, 'Dubai is the perfect fit for RIT, given the university's strategic plan to enhance global opportunities for our students. The proximity will also strengthen RIT's relationship and reputation among multi-national corporations by providing them with a competent workforce that is already exposed to operating in a multi-cultural environment.'

Dr Mustafa A G Abushagur, President/Dean of RIT Dubai, said, 'This is a great opportunity for RIT and DSOA to partner in creating a world-class university in the UAE. RIT Dubai will become a beacon of higher education that attracts top students from India all the way to Morocco.'

Asian Americans’ academic success misleading, report says

The success of some Asian American and Pacific Islander college students has given rise to a myth of the 'model minority' that obscures important differences within a diverse population whose educational needs are often neglected, according to a report released on June 9.

The concentration of Asian American students in a relatively small number of elite universities, including UCLA and UC Berkeley, has raised fears of a “takeover” of the upper tiers of higher education in the US, according to the report, a collaboration between a national commission, research institutes at New York University and the College Board.

In reality, more than half of Asian American students attend community colleges or minimally selective four-year colleges, the report stated.

Many of the students come from low-income families with limited English language skills, and vary widely in test scores and other educational benchmarks, the report found. Their increased participation in higher education closely tracks that of Latino and African American students, as racial and other barriers have fallen in the last few decades, the report said.

'We are not an ethnic group every one of which has just graduated from Harvard,' said Rep. David Wu (D-Ore.), speaking at a Washington D.C. news conference to announce the report.

There 'are two populations . . . one high-income and high-education attainment, and then a second group, equally important, that is low-income and low-education attainment,' Wu said. 'The [first group] has completely overshadowed the existence of the other group of folks.'

Many Asian American students do excel in higher education, particularly in California, where they make up roughly 40% of admissions to the flagship Los Angeles and Northern California UC campuses, UCLA education professor Mitchell Chang said.

Fueling the success has been the US immigration policy, which has favored entrance for highly educated and trained elites from Asia and Europe, the report stated, noting that those immigrants tend to push their children into advanced degrees and professions.

As of 2000, 44.1% of Asian Americans had obtained college degrees, according to the report. The average in the United States is 24.4%, the report stated.

But many Asian groups in the US fell far short of those achievement levels. Almost 60% of Hmong — from southern China and Southeast Asia — that same year had less than a high school education, according to the report.

Pacific Islanders fared poorly. Only 15% of Native Hawaiians, for example, had college degrees.

Chang said the lower income groups do not have the stellar high school preparation or other advantages of the more affluent ones.

The majority of Asian American students at UCLA are from low-income families, Chang said. Their choice of colleges is between UCLA and the Cal State system, not pricey private schools, he said.

They often feel 'tremendous pressure' to fit the model minority stereotype, continuing to struggle, for example, in science or math programs when they would be better suited to other areas of study.

'They end up having to drop out, or don't do well enough to get into medical school,' Chang said.

'For the general public, there's an idea these Asians are pulling themselves up by their bootstraps, but they're often struggling in ways very similar to other groups,' he said. 'We shouldn't assume they're all going to do well for some magical or mystical reasons.'

Chang and Don Nakanishi, director of UCLA's Asian American Studies Center, conducted a study last year that paralleled some of the findings of the new report. Nakanishi said he hoped that the new study, by directly attacking common myths, would dispel the misrepresentation of the Asian American experience in higher education.

'All the kids aren't from suburban high schools,' he said. 'They do have some special needs that come from the kinds of backgrounds they come from.'

Indraprastha varsity, NIS to start retail course

Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University and the NIS Academy have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to launch a three-month certificate course in retail.

The university has announced that it will launch the first batch of the new course by July 26, 2008. It will target the graduates and the working professionals, eager to make a mark in the booming retail industry.

The three-month short-term certificate course in retail will be offered as a weekend course to train students in the area of retail selling skills, customer service, soft skills, basics of retailing and retail store standard operational procedures (SOPs).

The initiative is expected to ensure a steady supply of the 'floor ready' manpower for the retail industry to help bridge the manpower demand and supply gap that exists today, the varsity said.

This will also enable the retail organisations to attract efficient, effective and productive human talent, leading to savings on training costs.

Speaking on the MoU, the university Vice Chancellor KK Aggarwal said, 'Industry-Academia partnerships in creating certified manpower will not only contribute to the hugely growing demand for manpower, but also enable quality education through University certified programmes.'

Highlighting the significance of the partnership, NIS Sparta's Employability Solutions Group Head Manoj Chawla said that through this tie-up both the organisations hope to leverage on each others strengths to offer job oriented vocational training and empowerment programme.

IT learning labs in Bangladesh schools

NComputing, AMD and BRAC have collaborated to deploy innovative technology solutions in 10 schools of Bangladesh as part of 50

Math gap will widen India’s rich-poor divide

Among the many reasons for the growing rich-poor divide in India, the yawning disparity in math skills deserves urgent attention. The 'math gap', if it isn't narrowed, may lead to a much sharper distinction between the haves and the have-nots a few years from now.

A new study by World Bank economists Jishnu Das and Tristan Zajonc presents some stark evidence.

The study links the results of a test given to 6,000 teenagers in two states — Rajasthan in western India and Orissa in the east — to students' performance on the same exam in 51 other countries.

The researchers conclude that mathematical abilities of India's 14-year-olds vary widely between the worst and the best students.

If other states are similar to the ones studied then it would mean that 17 million Indian students don't meet the lowest international benchmark of 'some basic mathematical knowledge.' That's 22 times the corresponding figure for the U.S.

At the same time, the depth of India's math talent — those whose test scores are considered to be of an advanced level — is also significant. 'For every 10 top performers in the U.S., there are four in India,' the World Bank economists say. That's 100,000 students, or more than any European country.

Mind the Gap

This latter group is supplying the bulk of India's scientific, technical, managerial and entrepreneurial talent and is responsible for the country's growing clout in the global knowledge economy.

It would be a perfectly happy situation for India, if so many other ninth-graders weren't falling hopelessly behind.

Take a sample math question from the 36 that make up the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study: What's the smallest number out of 0.625, 0.25, 0.375, 0.5 and 0.125?

The global average of right answers is 46%; in Rajasthan, it drops to 11%. Orissa fares only slightly better with 17%.

'The average scores of children in Rajasthan and Orissa place these states below 46 and 42 of the 51 countries tested in 1999 or 2003,' Das and Zajonc say in their study.

Only in South Africa was there greater inequality in test- score distribution.

The variance has less to do with household income, caste, parental literacy or wealth; more of it may be due to the quality of schooling a child receives.

`Hopeful Sign'

According to the researchers, this is a 'hopeful sign' because 'it is easier to change behavior among teachers and to improve schools, than it is to do the same thing among parents.'

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