Official Goldsmiths student newspaper
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VARSITY ARTS CUP 2014 ENDS IN FIRST EVER DRAW
Issue 20 March 2014 Free
100% OF STUDENTS FACE “TECHNICAL PROBLEMS” IN LECTURES By Courtney Greatrex Technology was one of the key issues flagged up by a recent study conducted by the Departmental Student Coordinators (DSC) which saw 100% of students surveyed stating that their lectures or seminars had been interrupted due to malfunctioning equipment.
Photo Credit: Camilo Fernandez
Turn to page 24 for The Leopard’s Varsity 2014 coverage.
COLLEGE TO ‘CONSIDER’ SU DEMAND FOR STUDENT SAY ON MANAGEMENT PAY By Ella Jessel
G
oldsmiths Students’ Union has launched a campaign to put a student representative on the remuneration committee that decides senior management pay, which the Chair of college council has promised to consider.
The request is supported by a petition entitled: ‘Goldsmiths students should have a say on management pay’, which at the time of writing has already garnered 147 signatories and was initiated by Campaigns Officer and President-elect Howard Littler. Currently, the remuneration committee consists of three independent members of council:
Mr Dan Lambeth an Executive Director of J.P. Morgan, Cathy Runciman, an Executive Director of Time Out Group and Ms Mary Stacey a prominent employment judge. The council chair is Baroness Morris of Yardley, ex-MP and now a life peer who sits in the House of Lords.
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS FEES
ELECTIONS: THE RESULTS
International students are being ripped of as fees rise year on year p12
Check out the winners of the GSU elections p6
The Leopard spoke to Littler, who said he had not heard “any good arguments” against the proposal. He stressed that it was vital to tackle the cynical view that decisions like this are “somehow too important” to entrust students with. “This is not just a reaction to the Warden’s 9 per cent pay increase,” Continued on next page... he said.
The annual DSC report, consisting of a survey that was completed by over a thousand students, was presented to senior management staff last week including Warden, Pat Loughrey and College Registrar Liz Bromley. The report stated: “Whilst the delay in each lecture may be only 5 or 10 minutes, the time that accumulates over the year is a significant amount. “All students also responded “Yes” when asked if their lecturer or seminar leader had needed to call technical support for assistance. 52 per cent of students went on to say that this assistance, on average, took between 5-10 minutes to arrive and 32% stated that it took 11-15 minutes.” This was confirmed by a separate survey sent to staff in which 82 per cent of staff surveyed had needed to delay the beginning of their lecture due to technical difficulties at least once, and all of them had consequently needed to call for assistance in fixing the problem. Within this staff survey, 72% of
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