Saturday, March 15, 2008

The Emperor's New Designer Threads

My crusade for justice has begun. I am no longer angry, but I am fiercely clear-headed and dangerously logical.

According to the Vision of Majan University College (http://majancollege.edu.om), it aims to "be a premier University institution providing students with value added Higher Education of International standards in a dynamic environment that fosters knowledge, values and sustainable employment skills." The Mission Statement sets the following targets: "to build a knowledge based learning organization", "strive for excellence in learning, teaching and research", "develop the creative potential of all its staff members" and "equip its students to make effective contributions to society and the economy".


Inspired by these lofty goals in addition to the reputable Leeds programme, I eagerly joined this course, and it was impressive to see that many of the staff I met truly personify this vision and mission. One of my key motivations for choosing this programme over distance learning was the access to resources that would be consistent, not only with the mission and vision of Majan, but also with the tuition fees. (21 students registered for the course hosted by Majan, raising over OMR 140 000, or GBP 180 000.The tuition fee per student is OMR 7000, equivalent to GBP 9000. A full-time foreign residential MA TESOL student at Leeds University pays GBP 9700 and has full access to tuition, resources and all on-campus facilities.) It is disconcerting that, two months into the course, our resources are limited to a collection of twelve books, mostly in single copies, some in duplicate, while any other sources are only available for reference inside the library. This for the princely sum of nine-tenths of residential study. Twelve books.

However, my fundamental concern is not the books: they can be bought, shared, borrowed. Students have been phenomenally resourceful, and as you yourself said, clear, original thought is more important than resources. My fundamental concern is the apparent underlying message that not only is the bare minimum sufficient, but anything more is a bit of a nuisance. The obstacles in the way of our group's students are more than ample, ranging from unpredictable work and family responsibilities, resource problems, mediaeval internet facilities and distance from the library, to language difficulties and a profound aversion to the written word. Additionally, as foreign students and non-native speakers of English, (not to mention being hosted by an oil-rich country) our MA degrees will forever be skeptically scrutinised unless we can shatter the preconceptions against us with sterling performance. Sterling performance may require a bit of reading. Which may, in turn, call for a few books.


The bottom line is that students deserve the opportunity to take more out of this course than a piece of paper in a gilt frame. I am paying for an education, not a degree. As to the current library situation, the BA students are entitled to their books and should receive priority over the MA students for those titles. By the same token, the MA students should be entitled to access the titles from their complete reading list- as a bare minimum- if Majan's vision, mission and the tuition fees are to be accounted for.

I have the greatest appreciation for all those staff who have embodied this vision and enacted this vision, and I trust that the library facilities will be brought in line with these ideals.

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