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A global education is one that incorporates learning about the cultures, geographies, histories, and current issues of all the world’s regions. It emphasizes the interconnectedness and diversity of peoples and histories.

  • JNU set to hold students’ union elections after four years, check dates here | Education

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    The Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) has announced that the students’ union elections will be held on March 22, the results of which will be declared on March 24.

    The Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) will be holding students' union elections on March 22, 2024, after a gap of four years. (HT file)
    The Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) will be holding students’ union elections on March 22, 2024, after a gap of four years. (HT file)

    The Jawaharlal Nehru University Students’ Union (JNUSU) elections were last held in 2019.

    According to the schedule released by JNU’s Election Committee, which is responsible for overseeing the polls, the tentative voter list will be displayed on Monday and will be open for correction till Tuesday.

    Students can file their nominations from March 14 and the final list of candidates will be displayed on March 16, an official notice stated.

    A University Governing Body Meeting (UGBM) will be held on March 20, followed by the presidential debate wherein the candidates will address other students.

    Voting will be held on March 22. The counting of votes will take place on March 24, following which the results will be declared, according to the notice.

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  • States are Bad at Giving Teachers Raises

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    Returning to the Census data, Figure 3 illustrates how inefficiently each state is in converting a new education dollar per student into spending per student on instructional salaries (higher instructional salaries and new instructional hires, including instructional aides). Nationally, only seven cents of each new dollar devoted to education between 2002 and 2020 went to instructional salaries. Massachusetts led the nation in effectively translating new education spending into teacher take-home pay—but even in that case it was only 34 cents of each new education dollar per student.

    This lens allows for better apples-to-apples comparisons between states that make varying amounts of new investments in public education. Nebraska, for example, ranks 33rd in the country in revenue growth between 2002 and 2020 and 29th in average teacher salary. But as Figure 3 demonstrates, Nebraska ranks second in the nation during this timeframe by translating 32 cents of each new dollar into higher instructional spending. By contrast Pennsylvania ranks 6th in per-student revenue growth and 10th in average teacher salary. But from 2002 to 2020, the state performed below the national average by only directing five cents of each new dollar to instructional salary spending. Pennsylvania has invested more money into public education than Nebraska over the last two decades and has higher overall teacher pay, but Nebraska has done a much better job at funneling new dollars into the classroom.

    High spending growth states generally fare better at converting new funds into instructional salaries. That said, some states with modest spending growth (Ohio, Mississippi) have been more efficient than states with higher spending growth (California, New Jersey) at devoting new funds to instructional pay. And low spending growth states such as Georgia and Missouri shouldn’t be let off the hook, since their new dollars have resulted in less funding going to instructional salaries per student. No state does a very good job at getting new dollars to instructional salaries, suggesting that the problem is systemic.

     

    Why giving teachers raises is easier said than done

    Why do states do such a poor job of prioritizing teacher salaries? First, salaries are not the only component of total compensation. The compensation gains that teachers made from 2002 to 2020 were largely eaten up by higher costs in benefits. Figure 1 shows that instructional benefit costs per student, which primarily comprise retirement and healthcare expenses, have grown by nearly $1,000, or 79 percent. For every new dollar going to instructional salaries, four went to benefits. Importantly, benefit cost growth is due largely to rising unfunded liabilities in teacher pension systems, which helps explain why states like Pennsylvania and New Jersey with ailing pension systems do a poor job at increasing teacher salaries despite ample K–12 investments.

    Second, Public Education at A Crossroads details how states have prioritized hiring new staff, especially non-teachers like school-level support personnel, over salary bumps for existing teachers. Nationally, total public school staff grew by 13.2 percent from 2002 to 2020 while enrollment grew by 6.6 percent. Non-teaching staff alone grew by 20 percent. The issue of benefit costs crops up here as well because new personnel are also affected by the rising costs of non-salary compensation.

    But most fundamentally, compensation and staffing decisions are made primarily at the school district level, and district leaders have different incentives than governors or state legislators. While state officials might focus on how their teacher salaries compare with those of other states, district leaders are more concerned with day-to-day school operations and competing with neighboring districts for staff. Additionally, district budget officers are risk-averse and thus inclined to deploy new dollars toward marginal support personnel additions rather than increases to teacher salary schedules that lock them into longer-term commitments. Consequently, district leaders rarely plan to take advantage of staff attrition and re-purpose funds for raises.

    To be fair, district leaders may have limited latitude to make these kinds of shrewd budget decisions, especially in localities with strong teacher unions. A chief budget officer in Los Angeles or Chicago would likely roll their eyes at any suggestion that they should make long-run budget tradeoffs; even if financial course corrections are desperately needed, their collective bargaining agreements would never allow it. And since nearly one-quarter of the country’s public school students live in one of the largest 120 school districts, a handful of contracts in union-friendly states can exert outsized influence on overall staffing and salary trends.

    Notably, Figure 3 shows that union stronghold states generally fare better at driving new funds toward teacher salaries. This trend is corroborated by research showing that stronger collective bargaining agreements are associated with higher teacher salaries. But even if a strong union presence leads district leaders to do a comparatively better job at channeling new funds into teacher paychecks, that doesn’t mean they therefore do a good job at balancing raises with other budget priorities. Teacher unions also have competing incentives like adding more members and securing disproportionate benefits for senior members, both of which cut against broad-based salary increases. Union-friendly states also tend to have more staffing bloat and higher benefit costs.

     

    No easy solutions

    If their goal is to ensure new funds result in higher teacher salaries, state legislators may need to force the issue on local school districts. States would first need to shore up their pension systems and free up dollars for salaries. But beyond that, the tools states already use—minimum state salary schedules, maximum class sizes, staffing prescriptions—would have to be put on steroids.

    Of course, that approach would curtail school district autonomy and scramble local salary schedules. It’s unclear how tightly funding restrictions could be enforced on wealthier school districts funded largely with local property tax revenue. Similarly, less wealthy districts with fewer dollars to go around would have their hands tied most tightly. For a glimpse of how difficult this option is, look at how Arkansas districts are handling the recent $14,000 increase in starting teacher salaries on the statewide salary schedule. Seventy-one of the state’s districts have resorted to compressing salary schedules so that teachers of all experience levels temporarily get paid the same until local leaders can fully determine how the new law will affect their budgets.

    The only other available option within the current public education system is equally unattractive, even though it’s what states are currently doing: pump large shares of new dollars into the education system and hope some of it trickles into teacher paychecks.

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  • New visa requirements for Mexicans in Canada hits language education sector

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    Languages Canada reports that 12% of students currently studying English or French at their member institutions are from Mexico, making it the association’s third-largest sending country.

    Close to 12,000 Mexican students studied English or French in Canada in 2022.

    The majority of these students complete short programs and therefore were visa exempt.

    However under new rules announced on February 29, Mexican students require visitor visas, unless they hold a US visa or have held a Canadian visa in the last 10 years. The change took effect less than 24 hours after it was announced.

    Gonzalo Peralta, executive director of Languages Canada, classified the change as “disruptive” and worries it could have a “real impact on the number of Mexicans who come to Canada” to study.

    Approximately 80% of the students at the English Language Centre at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay are from Mexico, according to Ismel Gonzalez, director.

    The Centre receives groups of students sponsored by governments or universities to study English or undergo language teacher training.

    These are “amazing initiatives”, Gonzalez said, an “opportunity [for] students who do not have the financial resources to do it on their own”.

    Gonzalez worries the decision won’t just affect Canadian institutions.

    He predicts fewer students will be sponsored to study in Canada, as Mexican institutional funds will now have to be stretched to cover visa fees and the cost for students living outside Mexico City to travel to the capital to give the biometric data required for the visa application.

    “[IRCC doesn’t] foresee the consequences of a decision like this. It’s stopping genuine students from accessing education.” he told The PIE.

    With these added costs and longer lead time, Gonzalez fears institutions will choose other countries for their study programs.

    Founder and President of Heartland International English School in Winnipeg and Mississauga, Gary Gervais, thinks it’s “too early to know for sure” what the effect of this change will be.

    “It’s kind of going back to the way it used to be,” he shared, referring to the period between 2009 and 2016 when visas had previously been required.

    “It doesn’t seem like a crisis,” he added.

    Gervais acknowledged that there was “more work to do with [education] agents and our messaging in Mexico”.

    “There’s a new process in place, and it’s not as convenient as before, but it’s not like the doors are closed to students,” he detailed.

    For 20 years, Lupita del Toro has “proudly” been sending students from Guadalajara, Mexico, to study languages in Canada via Destinos Educativos, the education agency that she founded and manages.

    While Canada has always been the top study destination for her students due to location, educational quality and the warm and “respectful” reception Mexicans receive, she described the situation since the announcement as “chaotic”.

    With the Easter study travel period a few weeks away, students have suddenly had to change or cancel plans. She reported that those students with the means to travel to Mexico City to give biometrics are faced with two-month wait times for an appointment.

    “They’re very disappointed”

    The “hardest part” is that young people with a dream to go to another place, and their parents finally have the money to send them, are unable to obtain visa, she said.

    “They’re very disappointed.”

    Peralta, Gonzalez, Gervais and Del Toro were all adamant that measures were necessary to curb the number of asylum claims by Mexicans in Canada. However, they all see room for improvement in IRCC’s processes.

    “It’s not the what, it’s the how,” stated Peralta, noting that the short notice caught institutions and students off guard.

    He urged dialogue and for IRCC to establish “trusted and reliable relationships” and to “work with stakeholders to work out better solutions”.

    Gonzalez agreed, saying, “Planning time is needed by all parties involved.”

    Gervais underlines the need for continued advocacy, “telling the story of language [education] and [its] importance to success in Canada”.

    According to Del Toro, “giving [young people] a language skill and all the experience that they have abroad [gives] so much to our culture”. She hopes for improvements to visa application processes and resources.

    “As soon as they can fix this part, things can get better, sooner.”

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  • How universities can prepare graduates for an AI-driven world

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    This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback.

    Nido Qubein is the president of High Point University, a private nonprofit institution in North Carolina. 

     When the AI-powered ChatGPT made its big debut, higher education leaders naturally questioned how their students would use high-tech tools like it to write essays and research papers for class.

    Just a short time later, we know that’s only a microscopic way that AI is impacting higher education. There’s a bigger question that universities should answer: How can we help students succeed and lead in a complex, AI-powered world after graduation?

    I believe the answer is life skills — the kind that outlast and extend beyond inevitable technological changes. We should stop fearing AI and instead teach students to be resilient, self-reliant, compassionate and capable of sound judgment.

    We won’t shortchange students on technical skills, but this won’t be enough in the face of AI. AI will eliminate more traditional technical jobs and drive major disruption — some positive, some much less so — in the way we live and work.

    Universities must ensure they’re teaching the following skills to students.

    Judgment and problem solving

    A fast-moving technology with a reputation for making significant errors requires oversight by people with strong critical thinking skills.

    I recently had the pleasure of interviewing famed theoretical physicist Michio Kaku. I asked him if it is possible for us to someday have artificial wisdom since we already have artificial intelligence. His answer was telling.

    “Intelligence is more than just being smart. It’s being able to put the data together and come up with some conclusions,” Kaku said, “and then from the conclusions calculate the consequence of these conclusions. That gets us into wisdom, and artificial intelligence does not go that far. It simply allows you to compute.”

    Experience is the best way to help students hone their judgment and problem-solving abilities. 

    Nido Qubein

    Nido Qubein

    Permission granted by Nido Qubein

     

    We need to deliver more experiences sooner for every major and every type of student pursuing a degree. When a student has opportunities to solve a real-world problem, implement a solution to a community issue or create something that betters the lives of others, they flex and build these abilities.

    Campuses usually have laboratories and real-world studios where students conduct research, produce creative works, master new technologies, invent new ways of doing things and encounter scenarios that will occur time and time again in the workforce.

    We need to give all students access to these resources as well as the freedom they need to be intellectually curious. AI lacks the human element we look for in leaders. Our priority is to develop the entire student, making them well-rounded, global citizens.

    Empathy and emotional intelligence

    A society going through the type of disruption that AI will bring requires strong leaders who have the ability to put themselves in other people’s shoes and lend a hand to those in need. 

    In 2022, our university’s Survey Research Center questioned 500 executives at organizations with 2,500 employees or more to examine what leaders are looking for when they hire candidates, as well as what qualities employees need to get promoted and continue to grow in their careers. 

    The survey confirmed what I have always believed: People skills are in high demand and harder to develop than technical skills. If you consider what Kaku said, that’s even more true in an AI-driven world. AI can guide the technical aspects of something, but only humans can frame it with empathy and emotional wisdom.

    A majority of executive leaders, 64%, said they would be more hesitant to hire a new college graduate who lacked emotional intelligence than a person who lacked technical skills. That isn’t surprising when you consider that an even larger majority of executives said it is much easier to develop an employee’s technical skills than their personal initiative and coachability.

    Another way to look at the importance of having life skills, such as emotional intelligence, is to consider how you feel in your doctor’s office. 

    Even though doctors are highly trained, they know that bedside manners are still an important tool. When you visit a doctor, their ability to listen and communicate with you matters as much as their technical skills, if not more. You might not return to a doctor who ignores your concerns and fails to answer your questions when you seek clarity about a medical issue. 

    We are failing our students if we teach them that life skills are no longer valued in the AI age.

    Resilience and openness to change

    We need to equip students with confidence to trust their own ability to embrace positive change and adapt to negative implications. Technology isn’t going to stand still, and neither can our students. 

    Disruptive innovation expert Daniel Burrus recently gave a presentation to our faculty about the future. He gave the example of two physicians — one who uses a medical AI platform to help serve patients and another who does not. He noted that most of us would have a lot more confidence in a doctor who is willing to learn and adopt new healthcare tools and technologies in pursuit of better care, as opposed to one stuck in their ways and scoffing about change.

    New technologies might mean new routines, new economic realities, the rise of new opportunities and the sunset of others. College graduates need the ability to embrace the positive and ride out the difficulties that come with disruption.

    We’ve entered difficult times, and our institutions must be able to strategically adapt in a way that benefits our students for the rest of their lives. Prioritizing their critical life skills is actually our most important mission. 

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