Annonse

annonser i Universitas

FOTO: Brian Olguin

Making the syllabus cheaper

Compendiums are being replaced with free syllabus material on one course at IKOS. With better information, more students at UiO will be able to get hold of the syllabus at a lower price, according to those taking the initiative to solve the compendium issue.

På norsk

FOTO: Brian Olguin

FOTO: Brian Olguin

In the Middle Eastern studies subject «MØNA2503», lecturer Jan-Erik Smilden shrunk the compendium to half its size by putting out links to the remaining articles on the subject’s webpage. The articles are available through the University of Oslo Library’s (UB) website. -We have made our own web portal with material relating to the Middle East. Currently we have over 60 articles there, both articles from the syllabus and other recommended articles, Smilden says.

Students can click their way directly to the articles and save them, or print them out.

- This is cost effective and saves time, while at the same time giving you access to more resources and more information, Smilden states.

Compendiums are sold with a standard price per page of 1,43 kroner, so a reduced number of pages in the compendium will also reduce the price.

The project is currently a collaboration between the Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages (IKOS) at the Faculty of Humanities and UB, and Smilden believes that lecturers are not being well enough informed about the possibilities of an online syllabus.

- The system can be used at all institutes, and it is easy for lecturers to use, if they are just made aware of the fact that it exists, he believes.

In last week’s copy of Universitas, Leader of the Student Parliament Heine Skipnes criticized the University of Oslo (UiO) for making compendiums unnecessarily expensive. As the university is already paying subscription charges for online access to the material, then you are paying double if you also have to pay an independent photocopying charge for the printing of compendiums, he stated. The UiO administration claimed that Skipenes was wrong, and that the example syllabus he put forward was not representative.

Head of Department at the Department of Academic Affairs (SST), Torbjørn Grønner, says that the administration at UiO does not have a formal policy that states that lecturers should use the system that IKOS is now taking into use.

- Shouldn’t the administration have a super ordinate plan concerning this issue?

- It seems reasonable to offer such a thing. However, this is an academic matter, and the people who make the syllabuses must decide whether it is a good idea to use these resources with the subject’s goals in mind, Grønner says.

Grønner agrees that students and lecturers should be made aware of these resources.

- We think that the possibilities should be made known among the lecturers who are putting the syllabuses together. And it is a plus that, unlike other online resources, these have been quality controlled by UB and the individual lecturer.

Fakta

Online resources at UiO
  • In 2007, UB spent 36 million kroner subscribing to databases, online journals and e-books.
  • All in all, UB subscribes to 11 000 online journals and 200 article databases.
  • Many of the articles are also part of the syllabus in traditional compendiums.

Ingen kommentarer

Forhåndsvisning

Felt merket med * er obligatoriske.

Formateringskoder

**feit**
Gjør teksten feit
*utheving*
Uthever teksten
[ordbok](http://s0.no/1/)
Lager lenka ordbok
> Tekst
Siterer teksten

Skriver du inn epost-adresse, får du epost ved svar. Adressa blir ikke publisert.

Sett deg inn i våre debattregler før du skriver en kommentar.

10 siste saker i news

Journalism-graduates face illegal temporary work

Norwegian media companies use of temporary employment is notorious. Rather than offering permanent employment, temporary employees are dismissed before gaining rights to permanent positions.

– We are willing to fight

In Norway 68 percent of students say no to tuition fees. Students elsewhere in Europe are up in arms protesting increased tuition fees.

The Christian Democratic Party (KrF) wants to introduce tuition fees

KrF wishes to introduce a tuition fee for international students. This was presented in the party’s alternative federal budget.

Forced to live with professor

Short term exchange students don’t have the same housing guarantee as regular international students. Due to shortage in student flats, two Chinese short-term students are now living at the home of a professor.

Students watch out:

No insurance in the reading room

Naïve students leave valuable belongings behind in the reading room. Regular travel insurance will not cover your losses if something is stolen from your workstation.

Wired up

Radient chairs and blinking carpets are part of the future, if we are to believe students of Oslo School of Architecture and Design (AHO) and Oslo National Academy of the Arts (KHiO).

Pests in student village

Invaded by flour beetles

Students living in Vestgrensa Student Village had their kitchen invaded by flour beetles after insufficient cleaning. The Foundation of Student Life in Oslo (SiO) disclaims responsibility.

Student cafeterias in danger of closing

The Foundation for Student Life in Oslo (SiO) is considering closing down some of the student cafeterias. Several of the cafés shows red numbers.

–Disappointed in SiO

The Foundation for Student Life in Oslo (SiO) promised changes after international students raised their voices against the “Two in one room”-arrangement. Halfway through the autumn semester little has been done.

Survey on the health of students

A coordinated health survey puts student health on the agenda.


Flere saker fra news »