Sunday, January 2, 2011

Roots of British Student Unrest Unresolved - NYTimes.com

Roots of British Student Unrest Unresolved - NYTimes.com

Roots of British Student Unrest Unresolved

LONDON — Despite a growing wave of student protests in Britainover government plans to sharply raise university tuition fees that saw buildings occupied at campuses across the country, and battles in the streets between demonstrators and the police whose ferocity at one point even seemed to threaten the heir to the British throne, the year 2010 ended quietly, with students heading home for the holidays and university authorities once again in control of their premises.

Both houses of Parliament have now approved measures that allow the cap on tuition, currently set at £3,290, or $5,150, a year, to rise to £9,000 starting in 2012, at the same time as central government funding for university teaching in most subjects will be cut 80 percent. There would still be some government support for science, technology, medicine, nursing and “strategically important languages.” Government-


Briefly: Education: India Will Survey Colleges and Universities

India's government is preparing to conduct the country's first comprehensive survey on higher education.

Green Column: Bali School Makes Sustainability a Way of Life

The Green School is built with natural materials, has no air conditioning and includes vegetable gardens on site to instill the importance of sustainable living in its students.