Archive for the ‘oxford’ category

University Funding

by michael

Disclaimer: I’m Oxbridge and Public School. Yeh.

As a current university student I haven’t liked a lot of what I’ve seen during the higher education funding debate/FUD-spreading/mud-slinging . First there was all of the stuff before the inevitable fee rise. That was never not going to happen but regardless, the campaign by students unions seemed to throw caution to the wind and sell it as meaning people from disadvantaged backgrounds wouldn’t be able to go to University. We are their peers and so if that is what we are telling them they are a damn sight more likely to listen than to the Government. It was never the case that this would be the result – the loan is pretty generous, the poorest students would get better non-repayable grants, and the repayment threshold was going up. That combined with the total debt being a little more than a single years average Grad salary makes it a decent investment in your future. I would have far preferred the line of my representatives to be letting people know that regardless of the headlines this means that nobody with the will, drive and ability to go to the best universities will be prevented from doing so by circumstance.

This ties in with the stuff on suggested race discrimination by Cameron and David Lammy but I am not going into that. It is messy and I don’t know enough. I think that Stephen Bush‘s interview in the Guardian covered that really well and anyone that hasn’t seen it should. (As an aside on that, I never understood why Hanna Thomas talks about ‘supervisions’ in a direct quote about Oxford. We call them Tutorials; Cambridge call them Supervisions. Maybe not relevant but seemed odd at the time)

Today I saw things like ‘Richest students to pay for extra places at Britain’s best unversities’ cropping up on facebook and twitter. Honestly, my first reaction was a combination of a horrified groan and disbelief at the idea, and that was the right one. To the headline and the article. It’s completely baseless. Of the 868 words of it, Willetts quotation makes up less than one-eighth. He is quoted as saying:

There are various important issues that need to be addressed around off-quota places, but I start from the view that an increase in the total number of higher education places could aid social mobility.

There would need to be arrangements to make sure any such system was fair and worked in the interests of students as well as institutions. But it is not clear what the benefit is of the current rules, which, for example, limit the ability of charities or social enterprises to sponsor students.

We are inviting ideas on the whole concept and we will listen very carefully to all the responses we receive.

Now granted, it doesn’t explicitly say that people aren’t allowed personally to pay for a place off-quota, but it doesn’t say it either. In fact it specifically says that it is businesses and charities that would be paying for the students’ education. The idea is obviously one designed to expand the schemes such as the ones KPMG are pioneering whereby people leave university not with debt, but having been paid a salary, with a recognised qualification, and a term of employment waiting for them. Considering the extensive requirements for diversity placed on these companies this could hardly lead to a discrimination. Nor do I really envisage a system akin to a tax-avoidance scheme funneling money through schools and charities to get this done. Hell, put a limit on the charities side of things to say that they can only do it for people that would otherwise qualify for full fee support and bursary.

Really this idea seems like it is very early days, but has the makings of something good. We have issues with university funding and we heard lots about how increased fees were going to put off people from poorer backgrounds. In an ideal world this would have been dealt with during the fees debate to ensure that these misconceptions weren’t prevalent. However, given they seem to be, this could be one way of addressing some of this. Not too long ago (I can’t find the link but will keep looking) I read of a charity that was taking kids from backgrounds that meant that they tended to have no experience of University, and were the perfect candidates to be put off, and then gave them encouragement and advice, along with some interview practice, etc. to make sure that they were in a good position to apply to places like the university I am lucky enough (but also worked hard) to attend. They were getting people in. Now combine this with benefactors that want to help relieve the fee burden and then we start to get somewhere.

There is no simple quick solution to how we fund higher education, but there is a simple fact that we have huge demand for education and little money to speak of. I would prefer a multi-pronged approach where the problem is tackled from several angles and artificial constraints are not placed on how many people universities can take. If it were to mean that universities started overfilling lecture theatres (more than they already do), or using grad students to teach (more than they already do), or any other of the myriad ways that more people could lead to a lower quality education, or indeed that suddenly if you had money then you were in, then I would be whole-heartedly 100% against this. Frankly, that is not what Willetts put on the table. He is quite clear about this in Hansard. Scepticism and firm guidance to make sure of a good result is excellent, but cheap politicking with a potentially good move is just daft.

Update 1: Edited 2011-05-11:1058 To include charity link to Guardian

Is Capitalism Liberty?

by michael

Was back in Oxford today and in keeping with my habit of noting interesting bits of graffiti. Saw this in the Caffè Nero on the High St:

Is Capitalism Liberty?
No, but freedom!
And development
And growth
And self-fulfilment
And prosperity

…if only

I’m always astounded at how profound people can be while tending the call of nature.

What’s that in your pocket? Or are you just pleased to see me?

by michael

I am sat in Caffè Nero on the High St in Oxford. Having paid in a cheque and been fitted for a ball suit I have popped in for a spot of brunch. While eating my meatball and mozzarella panini and drinking my latté I am keeping up to date with the news on my iPod touch. The guy at the next table is from college and is doing much the same but he is reading the dead tree Times. Over the past few days I have been fairly heavily revising for my prelim exams in a week and a half’s time and so I have been spending large portions of time in the Radliffe Science library. V easy place to work with the advantage of being undergroud and so there is no mobile reception. I periodically check Twitter on my iPod using their Wifi or access the online book database to find the Dewey reference of a text book to supplement my notes. It works perfectly.

Were I carrying around my laptop I would probably be crippled by the weight by now, but I can’t justify buying a netbook yet because my laptop is (kinda) portable and does more than I need despite being 2 years old. Looking at the new Asus Seashell I find myself very tempted but I keep thinking ‘it would be nice if it ran OS X’ (though I’m not sure how much that would change). This isn’t fanboyism, but more that I have a routine established there. I know how to make drive imaging work perfectly and jungledisk backs up my homefolder hourly to S3. Despite how beautiful Windows 7 is, and it really is. You know it’s good when @alexmuller with all his MS hating bile says it is the best netbook OS.

So what am I trying to say in all this. Something, and nothing. Partly I just really wanted to write something that wasn’t related to Biochemistry or Organic chemistry, but I also realized just how little I need something netbook- or even tablet-esque. The iPod is doing everything. It isn’t powerful enough and the frequentish keyboard hangs are getting a bit frustrating but if this had more power and a much bigger battery of would be the perfect computer in my pocket. If I am spending the day writing an essay then I will bring out the MacBook Pro if for no other reason than staring at this for prolonged amounts of time strains my eyes and 15″ screen is easier.

Would an OS X tablet/netbook be nice? Hell yes. Would I buy one? Honestly? probably not… I am not sure I am happy with the middle ground at the moment. My MBP may be heavy, but I bought it for some good reasons which still hold true and so if I am using a laptop I want that. A netbook or tablet won’t fit in my pocket for me to pull out, look up a reference, and then slip it away to dash off to the shelves. Make this iPod/ iPhone better or indeed bring out a competitor that has a similar app infrastructure and availability and then maybe we can talk. Until then the money is staying in NatWest, even if the eye candy is tempting.

A round-up and some thoughts

by michael

Well I think I finally found something I could write about – a general brain dump of the past few months and my useless opinions on them. Nothing spurs me on to do something useless better than the impending threat of collections in just over a week, and pretty much nothing done in preparation so far.

I started at Oxford this October as many of you know, and I have to say that the term, although only eight weeks long, has been incredibly intense. I was of course under no illusions that Oxford would be easy, but a essay being set during Fresher’s week set the tone for how the rest of the term was going to go. That being said, and while I do find myself working to the exclusion of almost everything else (except Spooks of course. iPlayer saves me again), I have really enjoyed the experience. As I am sure everyone says wherever they are in the world, be it Oxford or Bangor Tech, the people are great and the environment is fun. I never got the ‘Oh My God I am at Oxford’ revelation moment I expected, but I did find myself quietly grinning to myself at times. Although I have signed myself up for another four years of intense work and a life going at a pace that is constantly a little faster than I would like I am happy with it – experience tells me I will never pick the ‘easy’ path for myself, and so if I am going to be killing myself for these years I might as well be doing it in somewhere like Magdalen and Oxford.

During these few months the world has again changed. We saw Obama elected. Despite my cynicism around the elections about the timing of his family tragedies, I am very excited about the prospect of having someone who can string a coherent sentence together in the office of ‘the leader of the free world’ (said in suitably appaling American accent and mocking tone..). That title really does annoy me – it is self-appointed and arrogant. If the Americans were leading by any sort of example then maybe it would be justified, and maybe Obama will justify it, but time will tell. There are a few things which scare me about the US in general. The expansion of the borders to include everywhere within 100 miles of a border, thus allowing illegal stop and search in a large swathe of the US – the so called ‘constitution-free zone‘. The bringing home of marines to help operate at DUI checkpoints in California and elsewhere. Then there is Obama’s proposed citizen militia – many have drawn parrallels to Brown/Black shirts, and the dogs in animal farm. I just think of the finger-men from V for Vendetta. Time and time again it has been shown that if you give a man a badge, they assume authority and get drunk on it. You only have to look at the security people in airports who bark at you as God in their own domain to know that what little authority people think they have will make them feel superior and in the right.

No blog post of mine would be complete without the compulsory tech-related comments. The final Apple appearance at the Macworld show is this year, and the keynote tonight will be given by Phil Schiller. I am actually quite excited as I hope he won’t present it with the same smugness that Steve always did. Don’t get me wrong, the man is justified as being heralded as turning around Apple and making it what it is (I write this of course from my MacBook Pro), but the smugness and arrogance of the presentations sometimes made me feel a bit sick to my stomach at times. The question really is whether this heralds the end of Macworld as an event. Sad as it is, I feel that it does. I know that for me and some other Mac-centric friends Macworld is pretty much only about the keynote. We will follow it on twitter or engadget, and then forget about the other two or three days. I would love to see a show of hands in the Moscone theatre of who would have come to Macworld if there were no Apple keynote. My money would be on very few hands being raised.

As I write this, the final thing which springs to mind, mainly because it is a ‘breaking’ story, is that twitter was hacked. I wonder if it is coincidence that this has happened as the publicity of twitter has spiked recently. I saw a Daily Mail story lamenting how the celebrities share the minutiae of their days via tweets, and a few weeks back they were whining about Jonathan Ross having the gall to enjoy his suspension and to tell people about it. They had the stock indignant Tory MP saying that if he was enjoying himself so much then maybe it should be made permanent, yada yada, but the point is that twitter is being noticed. Barack Obama used it during his campaign, although since it has gone almost dead since the election, I reckon people’s hopes of tweets from the Oval Office along the lines of ‘Off to meet Vladimir. Oh Joy! *sarcasm*’ will not be happening. As twitter becomes more and more popular, not only will it be plagued with even more scaling issues like those we have become so used to with unacceptable downtime etc, but just like as the Mac platform gains Windows ground, they will become a bigger, juicier target for people wanting to have a bit of a laugh and gain some kudos with their friends. The recent twitter hack was achieved by gaining access to the twitter admin tools, as confirmed by @netik in a video interview with Leo Laporte. While I am very encouraged by their transparency on the issue, it is a pretty serious breach for something which is becoming so popular, used by many ‘big names’ as a platform.

Hopefully this toe-dipping back into blogging will spark me to write more stuff, but in the mean time, I hope all had a good Xmas and New Years, and that 2009 isn’t as much of a blackhole as it is looking like is it going to be.


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Summary

My name is Michael Henley, and I am currently a final year biochemistry student at Magdalen College, Oxford. Before that, I attended St. Paul's School in Barnes, London. This blog serves as an outlet of ideas, rants and general opinion. These are likely to change.

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