Oxford Seal The Oxford Alumni Association of New York
FUTURE OF OXFORD 

November 10, 2007

University of Oxford News

For news from the University, please visit http://www.ox.ac.uk/media/index.html.

June 12, 2006

Stanford University to start with tutorials.

It is only 115 years since Stanford University opened its doors to students. Today, the Financial Times is reporting that Stanford is going to start giving business students tutorials.

So while the talk in the UK is about ending tutorials for students, Stanford University, one of the educators of the elite out on the progressive American west coast is going to begin working with tutorials.

Those of us who have already benefitted from a tutorial-style education have no doubt that Stanford is doing the right thing.


The Stanford Graduate School of Business is to revamp its MBA programme completely to give a more personalised education to each of the 380 students who graduate from the school every year. The new style programme will include a series of tutorials and a menu of new programmes to ensure that the most accomplished students are stretched further than in the current “one size fits all” system.

Later in the article:

The personalised tutorial approach, he believes, means students “will develop habits of thinking and learning that they take to their jobs...The theory is, this programme will get them into a different way of thinking”, he says.

Although the article does not make clear whether it is just mentoring, or mentoring and teaching that will take place on a personalized basis, many of us from Oxford will agree that, as far as educational standards are concerned, Stanford is taking a big step in the right direction.

Hopefully, observers in Oxford will take note.

June 06, 2006

Education Guardian: Oxford University to press ahead with controversial reforms

Oxford University is to press ahead with controversial reforms of the way it is run, including plans to hand more power to business despite growing opposition among some dons.

In a white paper, the vice-chancellor, John Hood, confirmed that the council, which runs the university, would have a majority of outside members, including those with strong corporate interests, for the first time in Oxford's 800-year history. The move, part of a drive to modernise Oxford's governance, will be put before Congregation, the dons' ancient parliament, in the autumn.

Get it all here:
http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/news/story/0,,1788595,00.html

May 03, 2006

Oxford tops Guardian rankings for second year in a row

Read more at:

http://education.guardian.co.uk/universityguide2006/story/0,,1765198,00.html


http://education.guardian.co.uk/universityguide2006/story/0,,1765251,00.html

December 16, 2005

Colleges may lose admissions rights

Proposals under discussion by a working party headed by the President of Corpus Christi college may result in the colleges losing many of their admissions rights under a centralized admissions system.

Although I am in favour of centralizing power in some areas, this, most certainly is not one. Diversity of admissions is one of the things that ensures student diversity. Centralizing the admissions process, to my mind, can only reduce that diversity.

Write to Sir Tim Lankester and make your views known: tim.lankester@ccc.ox.ac.uk

Click here to see the working party report: Working Party report.

Or read the Education Guardian report, below.

Continue reading "Colleges may lose admissions rights" »