Monthly Archives: August 2020

5 Ways to help a friend in crisis

5 Ways to help a friend in crisis

We all go through a personal crisis from time to time.  Arguably, one of the worst things about a crisis is finding out people you considered friends, aren’t your friends.  Don’t we all assume friends are supposed to be there for each other through the hard times? Bring each other ice cream? Watch bad romantic […] … learn more→

Classroom aquariums: Tools to make education fun!

Classroom aquariums: Tools to make education fun!

One of the best ways to get children excited about learning is to incorporate hands-on educational projects with their typical reading, writing, and arithmetic assignments. Classroom aquariums have long been a popular option for teaching scientific concepts. Let’s take a look at how you can use classroom aquariums as an educational tool for children of […] … learn more→

School: yoga, an activity to be included in the program?

School: yoga, an activity to be included in the program?

Yoga has conquered the world. The postures of the crane, the raven or the half-grasshopper are all images of an activity that has become a global phenomenon in a few decades. Sports activity, spiritual awakening, art of living, yoga has become a “world-activity”. How to transpose into the school universe one of the most widespread sports practices in […] … learn more→

5 ways university education is being reimagined in response to COVID-19

5 ways university education is being reimagined in response to COVID-19

With the new academic year beginning shortly, students, faculty and staff returning to higher education or arriving for the first time face uncertainty. There is anxiety about a fall term like no other. Those of us responsible for ensuring the futures of post-secondary students have endured months of existential fears about student and employee health and safety, the efficacy of online […] … learn more→

How a fake ‘free speech crisis’ could imperil academic freedom

How a fake ‘free speech crisis’ could imperil academic freedom

Forceful suppression of political and scholarly views in universities has a long and shameful history. University of Cambridge Chancellor John Fisher was hanged, drawn and quartered for failing to support Henry VIII’s “great matter”. A few years later, John Hullier was burned at the stake on Cambridge’s Jesus Green for refusing to renounce Protestantism. We imagine our modern universities […] … learn more→

Let artificial intelligence sweep away the gloom

Let artificial intelligence sweep away the gloom

We’re all wondering what the future of higher education will look like. But I’ve glimpsed that future, and it’s bright. Higher education was already in crisis before Covid-19 arrived. Universities and colleges faced falling enrolments as students, questioning the value of expensive four-year degrees, turned increasingly to community colleges and online courses. Many schools scrambled […] … learn more→

Academics have the right to make wrong arguments

Academics have the right to make wrong arguments

The uneasy coexistence of academic freedom and more restrictive codes of conduct for scholars using social media has long caused confusion and consternation on US campuses. But this seemingly unresolvable conflict seems particularly relevant at the present moment, especially when it comes to scholars making comments in the powder-keg context of the Black Lives Matter […] … learn more→

Some Australian universities might have to merge – and that’s not necessarily a bad thing

Some Australian universities might have to merge – and that’s not necessarily a bad thing

Both COVID-19 and increasing discord with the Chinese government could lead to much lower international student revenues in the long run. If that happens, Australian universities might have to merge to remain sustainable. The growing quality of our universities is driven to a large extent by what economists call “economies of scale.” The idea is that operating on a […] … learn more→