4/20/2007

The Growth of Spanish Social Networking Websites

Laura Wides-Munoz of the US Herald Tribune has written an article about the explosion in Spanish language social networking websites.

Social networking websites (such as YouTube and MySpace) are communities or networks of websites that link or network together and have been lauded for some time now as the "next big thing" in terms of the way the Internet is set to evolve.

According to the Herald-Tribune around 67% of American 18-27 year olds Internet users are Hispanic. This particular age demographic is appernetly the group that is most likely to visit and use social networking websites.

Consequently dozens of Hispanic social network websites are being created daily: more established ones are ElHood.com, Quepasa.com and Vostu.com. The impact of this now is that these Hispanic American social networks are beginning to reach out and link up with social network websites in Spain.

You can read the ful article here: Spanish-Language Social Networking Sites are Flourishing

4/09/2007

Spanish Parliament Grants Universities More Autonomy

Salamanca UniversityLast month Spanish Parliament amended the Ley Orgánica de las Universidades de 2001 (the Organic Law of Universities 2001), which ultimately means that Spanish universities will have greater control over the selection of lecturers to fill roles.

The original Ley Orgánica de las Universidades de 2001 demanded that applicants for tenured posts had to pass a nationally controlled examination in their specific subject area before a given role could be offered. Also these accreditations were only given according to the number of university teaching positions available.

Now universities themselves can give permanent teaching roles to any teacher who has been accredited by new nationally recognised commissions made up of university professors. Also the number of positions available is no longer a consideration: accreditation is based upon a prospective candidate’s C.V. and not the number of permanent posts that need to be filled.

Some critics of this change in law believe that this will create an environment of academic nepotism or “inbreeding”: a practice that has blighted the Spanish university system for some time.