20 results on '"McNeill, David"'
Search Results
2. Speech, Gesture, and Discourse.
- Author
-
Levy, Elena T. and McNeill, David
- Abstract
Argues that on-line linguistic choices are made in a matrix of continuous discourse connection. Investigates hypotheses concerning communicative dynamism. Identifies gestures as reflective of the status of utterances. Interprets correlations of gestures and linguistic material as reflective of an underlying unity. (HB)
- Published
- 1992
3. South Korea Builds a Global University, with Help from the U.S.
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Abstract
Built on 1,500 acres of land reclaimed from the Yellow Sea off Incheon, about 35 miles from South Korea's capital, New Songdo City is billed as the largest private real-estate development in history. It is Korea's answer to Shanghai and Dubai. Estimates put the cost of the Songdo project, which is barely five years old, at up to $60-billion. The city's centerpiece is Songdo Global University Campus, a collaborative attempt to blend Korean, American, and European academic strengths. The founders broke ground in May and at least two American partners, North Carolina State University and the State University New York (SUNY) at Stony Brook have each received $1-million in planning money to help develop undergraduate programs. Both colleges view Songdo as a local recruitment hub. SUNY at Stony Brook currently attracts 2,000 students from Asia. The model for the Global University Campus is similar to Qatar's Education City, in which American universities will offer undergraduate programs inside a single campus, while administering them separately. Campus developers predict it will enroll 12,000 students by 2012. SUNY at Stony Brook will initially offer four undergraduate engineering programs, along with a business and a technology-management program. Students will be given an opportunity to study at the U.S. campus as well. Several more partners, including the University of Delaware, the University of Southern California, and George Mason University have signed agreements to start faculty and student exchanges, and, eventually, collaborative research projects. Moscow State University, Glion Institute of Higher Education, in Switzerland; the University of Surrey, in England; and Monash University, in Australia, have also been linked by the Korean media to the project. Songdo's American partners say that despite the potential difficulties, they are in for the long haul.
- Published
- 2009
4. South Korea Powers Ahead with Globalization Plans
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Abstract
For government officials in South Korea, it's a vision worth savoring: Within the next decade, South Korea becomes Southeast Asia's top higher-education destination, poaching thousands of Chinese, Indian, and Japanese students from American universities and overtaking rivals Singapore, Malaysia, and Hong Kong. The higher-education system's historical insularity fades away. A handful of South Korean universities climb into the premier global academic league. Local students elect to stay at home to attend a branch campus of an American college. Grandiose visions of the future often evaporate in the heat of an economic meltdown, and this one has its share of skeptics. Yet amid the wreckage of Asia's worst slump since World War II, the South Korean government is powering ahead with plans to transform the nation's higher-education system. South Korea has signed pledges of cooperation with American colleges and lured hundreds of foreign professors to what was once considered an educational backwater. The government believes it can propel its best universities into the world's top 50 and stem the flow of students out of the country. These plans, including a state-backed project to build a new "global" university from scratch in partnership with up to half a dozen American institutions, will not be affected by the recession, claim their architects. South Korea has pledged about $600-million over the next five years to its World Class University project, a ministry-of-education-led bid to raise the quality of research at 30 universities. Nine Nobel Prize winners, including the 2006 chemistry laureate Roger D. Kornberg, are among the 81 foreign researchers set to take positions in the country. BrainKorea21, a project aimed at creating "centers of excellence" in information technology, bioengineering, and other "knowledge-based" fields, has been promised $2.3-billion before 2012, in addition to the $1.4-billion invested from 1999-2005. Critics remain unconvinced, however, that these strategies will help South Korea overcome a crippling handicap in original research.
- Published
- 2009
5. South Korean Students, Hit Hard by Currency Decline, Opt to Stay Home
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Abstract
It is too early to predict enrollment numbers for international students in the United States this fall, but universities in Asia are already seeing big declines among South Koreans studying abroad. The value of South Korea's currency has dropped sharply in recent months, almost doubling the cost of living abroad for South Korean students and throwing their budgets into disarray. It has since started to bounce back but remains volatile. South Korea remains an important market for American universities, having sent nearly 70,000 college students to the United States in the fall of 2007, up 11% from the previous year. The country is an equally important source of students for many universities in Asia. The number of South Korean undergraduates studying in Beijing and Shanghai is down by as much as 50% on some campuses, according to Chinese state media. In Japan, undergraduate enrollments of South Korean students at some private universities has plunged to almost zero, forcing administrators to take emergency measures, including deferring tuition and seeking government assistance. Enrollments are also reportedly down at universities in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Australia, as thousands of South Korean students struggle to deal with their country's currency fluctuations. Anecdotal information from colleges around the United States suggests a mixed picture for the fall. San Jose State University reports that new South Korean applicants for its American-language program are down 56% compared with 2008. The State University of New York at Buffalo, however, says initial applications from South Korean freshmen are up by 37%.
- Published
- 2009
6. Japan's Poetry Boxers Get Ready to Grumble
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Abstract
This article reports that in Japan, a scholar of communications, in the hope of getting people to talk with one another, holds "boxing" competitions in which the blows are thrown verbally, in verse. In a crowded Yokohama hall, boxers file into a ring watched by cheering students and a panel of university professors. Nobody is predicting a winner, but precedent favors the bookish, the verbally gifted, and the female. When Katsunori Kusunoki, a professor of communications at Tokyo's Kanto Gakuin University, suggested "poetry boxing" as a competitive sport, he was greeted with raised eyebrows. But 10 years later, the annual tournament is still going strong, pitting opponents against each other armed with motormouths instead of fists. Poetry boxing is face-to-face communication in its rawest form, before a live audience. The rules are simple: In a ring with a blue corner and a red corner, 16 boxers face off in pairs in intense, three-minute competitions of stand-up verse. Winners must negotiate a series of challenges that include a timed presentation and a nerve-racking round of improvised jousting, prompted by shouts from the panel of judges. A tuxedoed MC keeps the crowd amused with nicknames for the deliberately mismatched competitors. Occasional low blows are part of the fun. Anything is fair game, as long as it stays within the time limit. Competitors come armed with haiku, comics, fairy tales, minidramas, dance, and hip-hop set to monologues on topics as diverse as politics and "natto," the famously smelly fermented-bean paste. Verbal gladiators come from across the nation and from most layers of Japanese society: university students, housewives, the disabled, teachers, salarymen, pensioners. The youngest so far was 15; the oldest was 93, although he never got past a local preliminary.
- Published
- 2008
7. Facing Enrollment Crisis, Japanese Universities Fight to Attract Students
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Abstract
Not long ago Japanese campuses were Spartan affairs with few frills American students take for granted. But times have changed. College enrollments are plummeting as Japan's supply of youngsters dries up and universities prepare for a profound shakeout that could see more than a quarter of all campuses closing in the next few years. Now, Japanese universities are doing everything to recruit students. This article describes the strategies employed by different Japanese universities to attract students.
- Published
- 2008
8. South Korea Seeks a New Role as a Higher-Education Hub
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Abstract
In less than two generations, ambitious technocrats have transformed the southern half of the Korean peninsula from one of Asia's poorest nations into the 11th largest economy in the world. Now they want to turn South Korea into the East Asian capital of higher education. Several American colleges are in talks to set up academic and research ventures here, while Korea's top universities are retooling themselves to be more competitive with elite institutions in Singapore, Japan, China, and the United States. The changes are driven in part by the growing number of students who opt out of South Korea's higher-education system to study abroad. Despite spending 2.6 percent of its gross domestic product on higher education (second only to the United States and more than twice the average of most Western countries) South Korea lost 218,000 university students to foreign study last year, a figure that has almost doubled since the mid-1990s. The education ministry makes no secret that the student drain has become a crisis, and that persuading more to stay at home is a priority. The government is offering subsidies to colleges that teach in English and supporting efforts to lure more foreign professors. The Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (Kaist) is at the cutting edge of what reformists believe South Korea must do to transform its higher-education sector. Beginning this year, all undergraduate classes will be taught in English, and professors and students must now compete to retain tenure and scholarships. The university is also throwing its doors open to non-Koreans. Whether South Korea is fleet-footed enough to leapfrog over its regional competitors to become a world-class educational hub depends on who you ask. Supporters say that South Korea's central geographical position, along with its size, mature economy, and Western-educated elite, give it advantages few in the region can match. Detractors point to unsuccessful attempts of foreign universities to establish campuses in Singapore and Japan and caution that proponents of internationalization underestimate the difficulties. Whether the answer to South Korea's problems lies with building up its own universities or building campuses for foreign ones, the writer concludes that the competition for students and faculty members will be intense.
- Published
- 2008
9. Few Women Reach the Top in Japan's Universities
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Abstract
Japan's higher-education system is the second largest in the world, after the United States, but it fares much worse than the United States when it comes to gender equity. Just 7 percent of Japan's 750-odd colleges and universities are run by women, compared with 23 percent of those in the United States. While four out of the eight members of the Ivy League now boast female presidents, none of Japan's top academic institutions has ever allowed a woman to rise to the top. This article examines the factors that contribute to the gender imbalance in Japanese academe. This article also describes the possible solutions in improving the ratio of female to male professors in Japan. [This article is produced by Chronicle of Higher Education, Washington, DC.]
- Published
- 2007
10. International University Will Open in North Korea
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Abstract
This article reports that construction is nearing completion on Pyongyang University of Science and Technology in North Korea, in which academics from around the world will teach the best of the country's graduate students. This will be North Korea's first international university and will let the world know that the capacity of their scientists is very high. The university is expected to germinate new companies and eventually a Silicon Valley-style industrial park. The university is leased in the capital city by the People's Army, which is building the campus. The venture is financed by a network of Christian evangelicals and other supporters. The university faces potential opposition by the Bush administration, who may refuse to allow transfer of advanced technology to the university laboratories. It may also face difficulty in persuading new lecturers to relocate to a country with few academic perks. However, according to Park Chan-Mo, the university's co-chairman and a prominent scientist in Seoul, South Korea, teachers will come to Nortk Korea not for money but to help the country and spread their Christian love.
- Published
- 2007
11. Still Foreign after All These Years
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Abstract
Paul Snowden's appointment as a dean to the School of International Liberal Studies at Waseda University was considered so unusual that he compared it to the first moonwalk. Snowden's new position was the highest position reached by a non-Japanese at Waseda, Japan's top private university. Waseda's embrace of foreigners is still considered an exception to the rule in Japan. While some parts of the Japanese society are slowly opening up for foreigners, universities in Japan remain strikingly homogeneous and isolated from the globalizing trend in higher education. This article examines why Japanese universities continue to feel unwelcoming to foreigners.
- Published
- 2007
12. Enrollment Crisis Threatens Japan's Private Colleges.
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Subjects
- *
PRIVATE universities & colleges , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *SCHOOL enrollment , *UNIVERSITY & college admission , *DEMOGRAPHY , *FERTILITY decline , *HIGHER education - Abstract
The article discusses the lack of enrollment at several private colleges in Japan. According to the article, Japan's ministry of education has announced that almost half of the country's 550 private four-year universities are below their government-set recruitment targets. Japan's low fertility rate and its demographic conditions are contributing to the schools' enrollment problem. Japan's foreign-student enrollment and how the acceptance of foreign students at a school reduces the Japanese student enrollment are discussed.
- Published
- 2009
13. Still Foreign After All These Years.
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Subjects
- *
HIGHER education , *COLLEGE teachers , *UNIVERSITY & college administration , *LANGUAGE teachers ,WASEDA University (Tokyo, Japan) ,YOKOHAMA City University (Yokohama, Japan) - Abstract
The article looks at how Japanese universities continue to feel unwelcoming to many outsiders. The School of International Liberal Studies at Waseda University, Japan's top private university, offers a diverse curriculum taught in English to students who must spend a year abroad to graduate. According to the article, the appointment of Paul Snowden as the dean of Waseda, which is the highest position reached by a non-Japanese at Waseda, was considered highly unusual. Most of the foreigners working in higher education in Japan work as low-level English-language teachers on short-term contracts. According to Bruce Stronach, an American and the president of Yokohama City University, Japanese universities are not doing well, and one reason is because the education students are getting is homogenous.
- Published
- 2007
14. After the Deluge.
- Author
-
McNEILL, DAVID
- Subjects
- *
SENDAI Earthquake, Japan, 2011 , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *EARTHQUAKE damage , *FUKUSHIMA Nuclear Accident, Fukushima, Japan, 2011 , *HIGHER education ,ECONOMIC conditions in Japan, 1989- - Abstract
The article examines how the March 11, 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Sendai, Japan is having an impact on the economic conditions and organizational structure of universities in the area. It describes how Ishinomaki Senshu University is being used as a crisis center for the homeless and disaster volunteers, reports on a trend of foreign students and faculty leaving the area amid safety concerns regarding radiation from the earthquake-damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, and examines how the economic problems resulting from the disaster may force Japan's Ministry of Education to reform the country's higher education system. It also explores how power outages have impacted university research projects and provides comments from college administrator Yoshiaki Ozaki.
- Published
- 2011
15. Japanese Scientists Fight U.S.-Style Ties Between Universities and Military.
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Subjects
- *
HIGHER education , *HIGHER education & state , *MILITARY research , *PACIFISM , *UNIVERSITY research , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
The article discusses a plan to increase cooperation between Japan's Ministry of Defense and Japanese universities for military research. Topics include the role of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in promoting university-military cooperation, the ban on military research at schools such as the University of Tokyo, and comparisons of Japan's situation with U.S. university-military cooperation.
- Published
- 2015
16. In South Korea, Foreign Professors Can Have a Hard Time Fitting In.
- Author
-
McNEILL, DAVID
- Subjects
- *
COLLEGE teachers -- Social conditions , *HIGHER education , *COLLEGE teacher recruitment , *AMERICANS in foreign countries , *TEACHER retention - Abstract
The article examines the difficulties facing American professors working in South Korea. It notes that the country has increased practices to internationalize its colleges and universities, spending more resources on recruiting foreign teachers. However, the author states that issues such as integrating into the faculty, contract policies that favor Korean academics, and poor retention practices have led to low success rates for American professors. Particular attention is given to disputes from professors Michael Foster and Steven Jordan with Korea University and the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (Kaist) over their termination.
- Published
- 2013
17. Japan Mulls Shifting Its Academic Year to Get in Step With the West.
- Author
-
MCNEILL, DAVID
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOL year , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *FOREIGN student recruitment , *EMPLOYMENT of college graduates , *HIGHER education - Abstract
The article discusses the possibility that universities in Japan may shift the beginning of their academic year from spring to fall in order to better align their schedules with those of Western universities. It explores how this shift may impact foreign student recruitment for Japanese schools, examines ways in which businesses who typically hire in March may be affected by this schedule change, and presents comments from Japanese university official Masako Egawa and professor Akiyoshi Yonezawa.
- Published
- 2011
18. South Korea Powers Ahead With Globalization Plans.
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Subjects
- *
UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *EDUCATION policy , *HIGHER education & state , *HIGHER education , *POSTSECONDARY education - Abstract
The author reports on steps that South Korea is taking in order to entice students to attend a local college. Steps that South Korea plans on taking to entice students to attend a local college are mentioned, such as opening up local branches of foreign universities. The author states that South Korea is also taking steps to improve the quality of research at its universities.
- Published
- 2009
19. South Korea Builds a Global University, With Help From the U.S.
- Author
-
McNeill, David
- Subjects
- *
UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *HIGHER education ,SONGDO Global University (New Songdo, Korea) - Abstract
The author reports on the creation of New Songdo City, South Korea. The author states that the centerpiece of New Songdo City is Songdo Global University. According to the article, Songdo Global University is being created to combine the academic strengths of South Korea, the United States and Europe. The involvement that the State University New York at Stony Brook and North Carolina State University are having in the creation of Songdo Global University is mentioned.
- Published
- 2009
20. INTERNATIONAL NOTES.
- Author
-
McNeill, David, Cohen, David, Labi, Aisha, and Kalman, Matthew
- Subjects
- *
GRADUATE education , *BOMBINGS , *DAMAGES (Law) , *HIGHER education , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
The article presents news briefs related to international colleges and universities. Research regulations in South Korea's universities have tightened following a faked cloning scandal by scientist Woo Suk Hwang. The "Banff" principles on graduate education were released by higher-education leaders who attended a global conference on graduate education. The Iranian government was ordered by an American court to pay damages to the family of Marla Bennett, a student killed during a bomb attack.
- Published
- 2007
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.