Jordanstown was formerly the campus of Ulster Poly
August 7, 2010 No CommentsJordanstown was formerly the campus of Ulster Poly.
Address: Four different sites spread out over Northern Ireland – up to 80 miles apart.Ambience: Depends on campus Belfast, housing art and design, is the smallest site Derry site is attractive, just north of the walled city. However, the majority of teachers, in my experience, are genuinely interested in their pupils and give considerable time to liaising with parents in a positive and caring way.Ms Hartley-Brewer’s somewhat patronising suggestions about how to improve relationships between teachers and parents are likely to be applicable to only a small number of teachers. To tar all teachers with the same brush will have thoroughly depressed them, particularly as many of them will have been returning to their first days teaching in a new academic year.The article is offensive and divisive and will serve only to make an already extremely difficult job even more so.John SherringtonTruro,CornwallPlease send your letters to Wendy Berliner, Editor, Education +, The Independent, 1 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London, E14 5DL Include a daytime telephone number. After all they have been criticised for letting standards slip.John BakerHove,East SussexNo war zoneThe title of Elizabeth Hartley-Brewer’s article, “How parents can learn to talk to the enemy” (Education, 3 September) gives the impression of a state of war in the schools between teachers and parents. But at the same time league tables of school results are published so that there is immense pressure on the science teachers to get the best results.I am not suggesting that science teachers would do anything as crude as marking something right that is wrong; but there are many subtle ways of indicating what is coming up for assessment, eg by doing something very similar the previous week.Nationwide, students do brilliantly on assessed coursework, far better than on the corresponding theory papers or practical exam; so perhaps the exam boards are just trying to correct for this inflation. The article depicts teachers as not only unhelpful, but also aggressive and negative towards parents.Of course, it is true that a small minority of teachers will exhibit these characteristics, as one would expect in any large employment group. Of course, there are a few lecherous egomaniacs who serially seduce students, but there can also be sincere romantic attachments Lecturers may abuse power, but so may students.
Yes, marriages can be damaged by such affairs, but then again, they can occasionally be made by them.I don’t deny that, generally, it is immature and unprofessional for academics to behave in this way. But we should not let the reality of exploitation lead to crude caricatures of these situations, or to over- zealous disciplinary procedures.Piers BennLecturer, School of PhilosophyUniversity of LeedsStricter marking?Tony Mooney’s problem (Education, 3 September) has nothing to do with the introduction of the modular system but is instead caused by the fact that teachers assess the laboratory work in some A-level science courses and this assessed mark contributes 20 per cent to the final A-level grade. My question for Professor Andrew is whether the students at Queen’s University have been consulted on this issue, and whether they are happy to have an increasing amount of teaching carried out by people whose top-most priority is research?Dr Roger BrownPrincipal,Southampton InstituteDownside of researchMy daughter has had first hand experience of the importance placed on research as opposed to students and teaching, while undertaking MA studies in Renaissance Literature at a prestigious London University college.Throughout this year she has had only one essay marked and both she and her student colleagues have seen their assignments consigned to a box in the faculty office for a semester.As an enthusiastic and committed student of English Literature who has a deep knowledge and love of her subject, she had hoped to continue on through the academic system and teach. Her experiences of the lack of student support and the emphasis placed upon research has left her disillusioned, to say the least.If universities are to have any hope of recruiting committed and caring teaching staff then there have to be other methods of assessment.Suzanne WardBrightonInternal affairsAlthough we should sympathise with Joanna Norris (Your Views, Education, 10 September), whose lecturer husband had an affair with a student, it is irrational to conclude that draconian measures are needed to prevent lecturers from having affairs with their students.The present Association of University Teachers advice seems sound enough: such relationships should be avoided, but if they happen then steps should be taken to ensure that the student’s work is examined by other staff members, and so on.To call for more American-style policing shows ignorance of the range of motives, circumstances and consequences of such affairs.
It is not, and will never be, possible for some departments in Queen’s to achieve this, but that does not mean that Northern Ireland does not need Geology, Italian and Semitic Studies.Similarly, research in Queen’s should not be exclusively concentrated on areas that are going to achieve the highest RAE rating (“international”).Northern Ireland needs the informed skills of locally-based academics for research into our complex problems, which will not always be rated of international standing but the value of which to our communal future can hardly be measured.Dr Jennifer FitzGeraldSenior Lecturer,The Queen’s University of Belfast”There is no evidence to support the commonly held prejudice that staff who make a substantial contribution to research do so by neglecting their teaching.” In saying this, Prof Andrew is clearly unaware of the substantial body of research evidence – admittedly mostly American and Australian – which supports that view.However, the risk that research-active staff will neglect their students has recently been confirmed by work at Oxford Brookes University. Because of the proliferation of academic institutions in the English regions, it is likely that the needs of the region in teaching, research and development will be met by diverse providers.The University of Manchester may well compete with its regional counterparts to achieve a high RAE ranking, without fear of leaving vital functions unprovided for. Northern Ireland, with only two degree and post-degree institutions, suffers from a deficit of university provision: the crisis in student places which would normally result is only averted by the fact that we export 40 per cent of our school-leaving undergraduates.The criteria invoked to abandon subjects in Queen’s include the necessity for a department to achieve a critical staff mass before it can rate highly in the RAE. Grade 3 is the average national grade in the Earth Sciences: only Geology teaching departments twice the size of that at Queen’s, and the research establishments at Reading and at Newcastle, were awarded research Grades 4 and 5.Dr Bernard AndersonHead of Geology Department at Queen’s University 1990-96,School of Geosciences,The Queen’s University of BelfastAs a member of academic staff at Queen’s University targeted for early retirement, I wish to make something quite clear to those who have now read Prof Malcolm Andrew’s letter.I do not have a weak research record I have produced in my 24 years at Queen’s 52 publications. This is a meritable output and my research receives international respect.
I am only judged as a weak researcher by the incredible standards now required by Queen’s in order to justify retention. My acknowledged contribution to the teaching of plant science at Queen’s is seemingly not valued.I am on the Editorial Advisory Boards for the Journal of Biological Education and Biologist – both journals of the Institute of Biology. The worth of an academic should not be judged solely on whether their research reaches a level 4 or above in the research assessment exercise.Dr Paul Clifford CBiol MIBiolLecturer, School of Biology and BiochemistryThe Queen’s University of BelfastQueen’s is not in an analogous situation to the universities of Sheffield, Leeds and Manchester to which Prof Andrew compares it. My appointment as a Teaching Quality Assessment specialist reviewer for UK universities over the next two years will best be fulfiled if I remain involved with teaching in my present post.What is at stake here is our answer to the fundamental question “What is a university?” Universities should be places where there is a symbiosis between teaching and research Students should always be put first.
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