Macquarie science reform movement refers to the successful
transformation of the degree system at Macquarie University in 1979
which followed an academic and political campaign initiated in 1977.[1][2][3]
Macquarie University, founded in 1964, adopted a degree structure
modeled after the Oxbridge tradition where all graduating students
were awarded a BA regardless of their field of study, with the
exception of law students.
Many science students saw this as a disadvantage
and began to mobilize for reform of the degree structure.[1][2] Thus, in
1977 a student organization, known as Students for a Science Degree
(SSD), was formed with physicist Frank Duarte as chairman. SSD enlisted the
support of science students,[3] student politicians, science
academics, and professional science institutions.
The BSc campaign lasted almost two years, and most of it is documented in the Arena student newspaper.[4][5][6][7][8] In 1977 a front page newspaper article read: "A student revolt is underway at Macquarie University against an outmoded degree system."[2] The campaign winded down only when the Academic Senate of Macquarie University approved, almost unanimously, a science degree (BSc) on 11 September 1979.[9]
A perspective on the science reform movement is given in the book Liberality of Opportunity[10] which was co-authored by Bruce Mansfield, a former professor of history and Deputy Vice-Chancellor of the University. In this account it is subtly implied that the reform movement might have been under the tutelage of J. C. Ward: "Ward was vocal in his denunciation of the trivia that filled up Senate agendas… suitably then, it was a close student associate of Ward’s, physics PhD student Frank Duarte, who began to mobilize student opinion in favor of a change."[10] This suggestion of influence is not corroborated in any of the numerous contemporaneous articles on the subject.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9] Besides, Ward’s own description of events states that: "there arose quite spontaneously from the students themselves a demand that they be allowed to graduate as Bachelor of Science."[11] His account gives no hints of tutelage, or influence, on the student leadership, when "the sciences revolted."[11]
In 1980, Greg Sheridan described the duel between the sciences and the Macquarie establishment as a "nasty, bitter bureaucratic struggle" won by the reformers and their allies.[12]
Back to the present: Macquarie University offers about ninety (90) named undergraduate degrees in addition to the original BSc introduced in 1979.[13]
References
^ abcF. J. Duarte, M. Golding, and B. Bulliman, Science degree, University News1 (100) 16 (1977).
^ abcdUni revolt simmers, Northern District Times, 9 November 1977.
^ abc2000 seek introduction of science degree at Macquarie,
The Sydney Morning Herald, 9 November 1977.
^ abF. Duarte and B. Bulliman, A what from where?, Arena10(7), 1 (1977).
^ abF. Duarte and M. Brandt, BSc at Macquarie?, Arena11(9), 3 (1978).
^ abF. Duarte, What's been happening with the BSc, Arena11(11), 9 (1978).
^ abF. Duarte, The Macquarie outlook, Arena11(13), 5 (1978).
^ abF. Duarte, AUS the redundant singularity, Arena12(1), 12 (1979).
^ abC. Parfitt, Macquarie University approves BSc degree,
The Sydney Morning Herald, 13 September 1979.
^ abB. Mansfield and M. Hutchinson, Liberality of Opportunity: A History of Macquarie University (Macquarie University, Sydney, 1992).
^ abJ. C. Ward, Memoirs of a Theoretical Physicist (Optics Journal, Rochester, 2004).
^G. Sheridan, Australian physicist wins Guthrie Medal, The Bulletin101(5239), 49-50 (1980).