Yeah its stupid. UNSW Admin is taking over control of the mining timetables as well. Kind of stupid considering we only have like 30 - 40 students in each year, and would be better off adjusting our own timetables. Powerhungry morons.
I don't think so. Looking at the timetables now most of the subjects are still within Mon-Thur.§eraphim said:From next year onwards, there will be no more 3-day wks for Commerce students. Everything will be spread out over 4-5 days.
where can you see the timetables? The 2007 version of the timetable doesnt have any dates yetredslert said:I don't think so. Looking at the timetables now most of the subjects are still within Mon-Thur.
You're an idiot.politik said:Everyone knows that the School of Chemistry is getting a raw deal. It's making losses and it should count itself lucky that the University doesn't cut their funding further.
The new vice chancellor.Nebuchanezzar said:it's becoming quite a sad state of affairs when a university has to treat its faculties like God damn businesses. Oh who is there to blame I ask?
Yeah I read about.. It will be good for course based timetable, but on the otherhand it means I will have less time to do my thesis.. Sheeett-i-m-m-y said:But I can say that would be more likely in 2008 if the proposed semester structure is implemented - in brief, 12+1 weeks, less STUVAC, 3 exams/day, 7 days of exams ( I think), and graduations in December for S2 graduands.
Personally, I agree with Hilmer's vision for the university. UNSW is sliding down the Go8 scale and action is needed to fix that.MedNez said:The new vice chancellor.
He's made us more into a business and keeps cutting our spending and faculty funding to minimise costs and up revenue.
They bought new software to help do it.t-i-m-m-y said:Currently, UNSWide timetabling is working hard on the timetable, there are about 3000-4000 classes yet to be scheduled. And yes, it's all becoming centralised - saves $$$.
Confessing about something?t-i-m-m-y said:... (currently, a lot of unneeded lazy staff) ...
Well, yes it is a shame that the way the university operates is to a certain degree influenced by financial matters. Ultimately, the uni has to bow to the almighty $$$ - blame the capitalists.Nebuchanezzar said:Politik is clearly a penis. Universities have never been run as businesses throughout history. To do so only inhibits their true function, to enlighten the community and to engage in research. When you're preventing that because one faculty doesn't live up to its profit margin or whatever, you're not running a university, you're running a piece of shit business. It's not the way it ever has been, it's not the way it should be. Finances have never been important for determining what part of a university stays and goes, and it should never be. Is this what they teach you in economics? It's an absolute shame.
Blah blah blah, bling bling bling bullshit theory regurgitated from some phoney baloney classroom. Explain to me, someone with very little knowledge of economics, how a university that has to answer to the balance books and operate like some kind of small business is good for anyone but a government more concerned with having an absurd surplus that goes nowhere? Explain to me how a university that has to make cuts to a school of chemistry of all things is good for anyone. It's not good. Yeah, fine, if it was some bullshit class like modern dance that's good for nothing, be rid of it - noone will give a crap. It's a school of chemistry for crying out loud. There ought to be limits to your ignorance regarding common sense.If you knew anything about Economics you would know that it is a Science of Choice - it is not a discipline riddled with Moral Nilhilism - rather it advocates that the best place for society is one in which market has the liberty to reach an equilibrium that BENEFITS ALL.
No, noone mentioned that a business was a black art. What my problem is, is that a university amongst others (hospitals, schools) which clearly server a highly important function in society, always have and always will, have to operate according to a stringent set of worthless rules so that money is made. Education doesn't inherently come from money making, it never has and never will. Effective education should be something that creates a loss, and it should be up to the taxpayers to offset that loss.Your common arguement that business is a black art is both unfounded and irrational.
A couple of months in an economics degree and already you're spouting bullshit as if you're some kind of expert ey politik? Anything written in this paragraph I've already addressed.Most Economics students will tell you that Adam Smith envisioned a world WITHOUT trade barriers, tariffs, etc - all of which ARE IMPOSED BY GOVERNMENTS. Economics provides the ideal image of a market, in which (based on the exchange principle where everyone wins) everyone is equal and producing at a socially-efficient level.
I suppose that rests on your definition of success. You, and others like you believe that an effective education comes from a university that makes money. I on the other hand, along with everyone else who has even a trace of common sense sees that a university is clearly different from a corner shop. It's a freaking higher educational institution, and there's absolutely no reason why it should have to cut back on essential educational components simply to adhere to a few bullshit theories posed by a few old men. If those theories worked for a better world, then sure, I have very little problem with them. I don't see how a university which has to cut back on giving education is good for anyone though.The only way for ANY UNIVERSITY to succeed is for it to be as efficient as possible. Only then, can there be any social-advantages.
Yes, and efficiency clearly means a good education, doesn't it Politik?If academics aren't made to meet targets and budgeted goals (that are attainable), then they would not find the incentive to produce at an efficient level.
Yes, but that rests on the moronic assumption that a university is no different from any other firm, when it clearly is. It's owned by the taxpayer, funded by the taxpayer, administered by the taxpayer and is used by a select few amongst those taxpayers. There's clearly a limit where a douchebag such as yourself has to step back, think about what you're saying and think to yourself "Jeez, maybe a university is just a tad different from all these other things I'm thinking about. Maybe it does serve a higher purpose besides creating revenue. Perhaps there is something that provides it with money for the sole purpose, so that it doesn't jeapordise education with book-keeping.If there is NO CASH FLOW in a business, if a firm focuses on making losses and incurring debt in the assumption that there will be a return in the future, THE FIRM WOULD COLLAPSE.
That's a possibility, but performace at a university isn't always related strongly to how much money its pumping out. On one hand, you have a school of chemistry which is losing staff and facilities because it's not creating enough revenue. On the other hand, my hand, you'd have a school of chemistry which is still opreatring at a loss but with a much higher standard of teaching, with the lsses being offset by the state whose role, is to offset those very losses.If Faculties were put on notice about their performance, THEY WOULD BE COMPELLED TO PERFORM, AND THEREFORE, ATTRACT BETTER STUDENTS, AND ENHANCE THEIR LEARNING ENVIRONMENT.
Nebuchanezzar: let me just remind you that the school of chemistry operating at a loss is different to the entire UNSW operating at a loss. If UNSW were to operate at a loss, it wouldn't be around.Nebuchanezzar said:I'd much rather a university operating at a loss, funded heavily by the government (as it has been for the last...3.5 billion years) with greater emphasis on quality rather than a university that sacrifices quality simply so that it can acheive a profit. Educational institutions shouldn't have to operate as a profit creating cash cow, they should operate as educational institutions above all else.
What's the other school that's doing the dastardly deed of being in the red?