6,860 research outputs found
Academic freedom and changing focus on student assessment in Dutch higher education
The paper addresses this issue of academic freedom by exploring how the new regulation regarding student assessment procedures has been implemented in Dutch higher education institutions. We endeavour to understand how teaching staff have responded to the new rules and to what extent decision-making processes have included teaching staff. To answer our research question, we would like to concentrate on two issues: the role of the Examination Board and the design of the assessment procedures. Our working hypothesis is that new institutional arrangements of student assessments reduce academic freedom. Previous research has showed that academics largely engage in symbolic compliance with the imperatives of management requirements while keeping their academic freedom intact (Leisyte and Dee 2012). Universities in their turn, are increasingly acting as strategic actors in not only complying but also shaping their institutional environments (Meyer and Rowan 1977, Greenwood and Hinnings 1996, Krücken 2011). The responses to established norms and beliefs range from passivity to increasingly active resistance (Oliver 1991). We will discuss if the impingement on academic freedom is offset by increased assurance of quality for students, and explore how to balance the two values of freedom and quality. Methods used are document analysis and interviews with teachers, university administrators and during Fall 2011 in the frame of the Identifying Barriers in promoting European Standards and Guidelines for Quality Assurance (IBAR) project
Status of center dominance in various center gauges
We review arguments for center dominance in center gauges where vortex
locations are correctly identified. We introduce an appealing interpretation of
the maximal center gauge, discuss problems with Gribov copies, and a cure to
the problems through the direct Laplacian center gauge. We study correlations
between direct and indirect Laplacian center gauges.Comment: Presented by S. Olejnik at the NATO Advanced Research Workshop
"Confinement, Topology, and other Non-Perturbative Aspects of QCD", Jan.
21-27, 2002, Stara Lesna, Slovakia. 10 pages, 3 figures (8 EPS files), uses
crckapb.st
Vortex solution in 2+1 dimensional Yang-Mills theory at high temperatures
At high temperatures the A_0 component of the Yang--Mills field plays the
role of the Higgs field, and the 1-loop potential V(A_0) plays the role of the
Higgs potential. We find a new stable vortex solution of the
Abrikosov-Nielsen-Olesen type, and discuss its properties and possible
implications.Comment: 8 p., three .eps figures include
Charge Screening, Large-N, and the Abelian Projection Model of Confinement
We point out that the abelian projection theory of quark confinement is in
conflict with certain large-N predictions. According to both large-N and
lattice strong-coupling arguments, the perimeter law behavior of adjoint Wilson
loops at large scales is due to charge-screening, and is suppressed relative to
the area term by a factor of . In the abelian projection theory,
however, the perimeter law is due to the fact that out of adjoint
quark degrees of freedom are (abelian) neutral and unconfined; the suppression
factor relative to the area law is thus only . We study numerically the
behavior of Wilson loops and Polyakov lines with insertions of (abelian) charge
projection operators, in maximal abelian gauge. It appears from our data that
the forces between abelian charged, and abelian neutral adjoint quarks are not
significantly different. We also show via the lattice strong-coupling expansion
that, at least at strong couplings, QCD flux tubes attract one another, whereas
vortices in type II superconductors repel.Comment: 20 pages (Latex), 8 figures, IFUP-TH 54/9
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