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Due to impending changes to the funding structure of the MSc Human Ecology, reflecting wider changes in Strathclyde University’s approach to funding Masters courses, the CHE Board of Directors has decided that we are unable guarantee the quality of the course beyond the graduation of our current cohorts. We will therefore not be offering the course to a new intake in September 2009.
We have worked through the implications of this decision with Dr.
Robert Rogerson, Head of Department of Geography and Sociology, and are
able to confirm the current partnership will remain to guarantee all
our students are able to complete their studies with us.
The CHE has thrived over the years because we have learned something
about how to flow through cycles of organisational (re)birth and death.
As the financial pressures on the department (and therefore the MSc)
have become more apparent in the last two years, a wide group of tutors
and graduates have sought to develop the Human Ecology programme in
such a way as to allow us access to opportunities beyond our current
partnership with the Department of Geography and Sociology. This work
has included a powerful overhaul of the syllabus, as well as
significant development work that enables us to communicate the
evidence of the strengths of CHE’s work over the years within and
outwith academia.
For example, at the 2008 AGM, we discussed the
potential for a community of practice to sustain the reciprocal
relationships that are at the heart of our commitment to each other
within the CHE community. At Easter last year, a group of 25 graduates
demonstrated the vitality of this commitment by gathering in Falkland
to reflect on how to re-invent the MSc, and we thank the efforts of all
who attended, and in particular Verene Nicolas, Gerri Smyth, Myshele
Goldberg and Helen Jeans, who have worked incredibly hard to re-create
the course for the 2008-9 intake.
We are also pleased to report that we are exploring a continued
relationship with the Department of Geography and Sociology that may
allow us to build on our work together in the past four years - to
create a sustainable future for collaborative teaching and research
into Human Ecology in the department.
On 23 April, there was a vibrant AGM where potential new directions
were discussed and working groups were formed, looking at how CHE can
most effectively serve the world of 2010-2015. At the heart of our
enterprise will remain CHE’s ethic of living in respectful and vibrant
community with each other and the earth, and we will be sharing the
news as seeds of ideas begin to sprout and grow.
If you’d like to be
involved with this new stage of CHE’s evolution, or make a donation
tosupport us, please contact
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.
Photo by graduate and director Myshele Goldberg. |