There is a serious shortage of high-impact research in management studies and a one-sided focus on journal publications is to blame say Jorgen Sandberg and Mats Alvesson Never have so many worked so hard and published so much, to so ...
More »Major “flaws” in regional policy analysis
Failure to consider all relevant data and the lack of detailed explanations raise concerns about the Grattan Institute’s conclusions writes Ian Goulter T he Grattan Institute is proposing a radical change in how Australia invests in regional development and higher ...
More »Skills barely rate a mention from Coalition
Training was front and centre in the federal budget. But the opposition left it behind the dead ball line. VET was given top billing in the federal budget, with the government highlighting its so-called $3 billion training package as the ...
More »Performance Funding
Universities were not providing the necessary data to satisfy the governments writes David Woodhouse. In response to Campus Review’s budget story that universities had foregone some indicator-based funding the executive director of AUQA explains why. When AUQA began operations in ...
More »Uneven performance by Productivity Commission
The commission's report on the VET workforce is of mixed quality, says John Mitchell. The Productivity Commission‘s recent report on the VET workforce is a major piece of work containing both strengths and weaknesses. It is a pity there are ...
More »Hidden stories and unasked questions
Indigenous students are engaged with the university experience but completiion rates are lower than the general student population Susan Page and Christine Asmar explore why In comparison to their non-indigenous peers, indigenous students are just as satisfied with their university ...
More »Split demand
Student demand and industry demand aren’t the same thing. In May 2009, with the Bradley report still warm from the presses, the Rudd government’s second budget heralded a “new era” for universities. “This reform will ensure universities cater to the ...
More »Lecture theatres will have cafe-like spaces
Universities are rewriting the rules about what a teaching and learning space should look, feel and act like, writes Matthew Lynch The traditional institutional spaces that have dominated Australia’s landscape of higher education are being supplemented with a new spatial ...
More »Let's put away that cloth-cap insecurity
It’s time we got past this whole sector thing, writes Stuart Middleton I have just returned home from the Australian Vocational Education and Training Research Association conference in Melbourne, and very good it was too, with interesting papers, good keynotes ...
More »Bradley benchmarks to apply in indigenous education review
Among challenges will be convincing people who have not seen the transformative nature of a university education first hand what it means and why the cost is worth it, write Larissa Behrendt and Steven Larkin. Despite the good will of ...
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