tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17278382.post6342114594045174692..comments2023-10-16T08:37:22.742+00:00Comments on An incredulous eye on the isles: UHI to face cutsElectricCrofterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09495260997875836669noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17278382.post-66195512162536105762011-10-22T10:53:26.674+00:002011-10-22T10:53:26.674+00:00Strange isn't it? Bloggers will complain when ...Strange isn't it? Bloggers will complain when all the satellites of UHI are bing centralised in Inverness but are panting with glee when Tesco proposes increasing in size which we all know will result in local closures of smaller shops. <br /><br />You are right. The achievement of University status by UHI may yet prove to be a pyrrhic victory for Lews Castle.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17278382.post-81298131186315626522011-10-10T19:09:12.209+00:002011-10-10T19:09:12.209+00:00Angus,
biggest danger to Colleges is not UHI but S...Angus,<br />biggest danger to Colleges is not UHI but Scottish Government. Cuts of 10+% this year with further cuts of 10+% next year and more cuts in the years after. these aren't cuts in real terms but actual cash cuts. Not a very wise thing to do with economy in the state it's in!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17278382.post-67317870627151003612011-10-06T15:15:39.863+00:002011-10-06T15:15:39.863+00:008:30 - UHI would not have the financial challenges...8:30 - UHI would not have the financial challenges it has if it was funded for all the HE students it teaches - currently funded for 3,400 students but teaches 4,300!<br /> As to your comments about research - UHI may appear to be poor in relation to 'whichever standard metrics are applied' but these metrics have to be considered in the context of the funding it receives for Research. I'm not convinced it's as poor as you think.<br /><br />Angus - on the issue of the 'University of Inverness' there is always a danger that any organisation will attempt to centralise everything - this is based on the misconception that big is best and that a command and control approach to management actually works. The UHI partnership has many strengths and many good people - don't be too quick to write it off - that would be a mistake - just as big a mistake as our friends in Inverness thinking that they have all the right answers and that they are the only solution.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17278382.post-78627016323360042592011-10-05T23:20:11.481+00:002011-10-05T23:20:11.481+00:00I think it would be a good idea if people were abl...I think it would be a good idea if people were able to train on the island for skills which are needed on the island. You can hardly get a plumber, electrician, joiner, plasterer...and wait months for a decent one. We could also do with some administrators and a few more accountants to help people to keep between the fences with that pesky funding for 'community' projects.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17278382.post-55675516343077240612011-10-05T20:30:41.376+00:002011-10-05T20:30:41.376+00:00Weird - it's almost like you were reading my e...Weird - it's almost like you were reading my email conversations when you wrote that post...<br /><br />I refer you to this:<br /><br />http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-14854752<br /><br />Point of fact. The university is in the right subject areas - with the wrong demographic of students. They were supposed to attract very high paying students from e.g. China's growing renewables industry. Which would in effect (though not directly as that's a legally grey area) support more local students.<br /><br />It hasn't worked out. The institution is haemoraging money, and this was before the recent spending storms. The next academic year it'll be involved in far fewer things, and centralisation - in other words, more expensive jobs on the fringes - have to go.<br /><br />It's not helped that some senior people in UHI openly loathe the extra expense of the islands, and the logistical difficulties. Regularly, the suggestion is "informally" floated that the UH is viable in the long term, but the UHI is not.<br /><br />Also, in terms of the quality of research - from a national, let alone an international - perspective, UHI is very poor, whichever standard metrics are applied. An academic institution of this level of funding should be doing much better, just to be average. But it isn't. And there's no sign of it improving - rather, the signs point the other way.<br /><br />It's left Scotland's government in a quandry. It can't shut it down, as that would mean the possible loss of several crucial rural seats, and calls that the government is anti-education. It can't merge, as no other university will touch it with a bargepole. The VC of one of the other Scottish universities - one of the biggest - laughed rather publicly when this was suggested to him.<br /><br />There's a more serious reason why UHI is doomed as it is, but you will get serious legal hassle if I write it on here, so I can't. I predict a slow but steady centralisation and contraction, with the university eventually becoming a small, single-campus institution in Inverness, marketed more blatantly to high fee paying students and researchers from outside the EU. By 2020, there will be several FE-level colleges much bigger than the UH(I).Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com