Accepting men at St Hilda's

edit

Somehow, this sentence: "However, it intends to join the unholy mass of mixed colleges in Michelmas term of 2007 by accepting male students, thus bringing to an end the college's prestigious role as the last all-female college in Oxford." does not seem NPOV. Does anybody agree on this?  :: Salvo (talk) 00:53, 16 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Yes, I totally agree, I've re-written it. --Alf melmac 01:25, 16 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Has anyone else ever heard of the "Women's Institute of Equal Rights"? This entry is the only google hit, and there's no source. 12:28, 20 February 2006 (UTC) Jdc

I strongly suspect that it's a hoax. The quotation (which I've moved from the article to this page, below) reads like a semi-literate parody of 1970s dim-left feminism of the silliest kind:
A spokesperson for the Women's Institute of Equal Rights commented on this development:
"The lack of an all-women's college or hall in the University of Oxford will result in a return to the phallocentric nature of the institution as a whole. We would have hoped this college could continue to provide a safe haven for women who excel academically in the company of fellow women without the forbidding presence of testosterone. It is a sad day for women's right in the developed world as we know it."
--Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 12:33, 20 February 2006 (UTC)Reply
I've rewritten the part about it being a womens' only college because technically it's not as the statutes have been changed. I think the article needs expanding generally to bring it up to the standard of the majority of other college pages. Visium 19:44, 12 January 2008 (UTC)Reply


Libby Purves

edit

I've removed Libby Purves from the list of former students. According to "Who's Who", she was at St Anne's. CarolGray 09:54, 16 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Questionable text

edit

I'm not sure about this:

As with all the colleges of the University of Oxford, St Hilda's has always maintained very high academic standards in all fields. In its history as a women's college, it has also shown continuation at degree level of particular trends demonstrated by girls at GCSE and A-Level, with students at St Hilda's scoring huge numbers of Firsts in English and History. St Hilda's has frequently produced a greater percentage of English Firsts per year than any other constituent college.

The first sentence is of course in a sense true. There is no such thing as an Oxford college that does not maintain high academic standards by comparison with the rest of the academic world. However, this site, giving the Norrington Table 2000-07 Matt Mayer: Norrington Table 2000-2007, indicates that undergraduates have typically achieved results that are among the lowest in the university (the permanent private halls, which are not included in these statistics generally do badly too). Out of thirty college presenting undergraduates for Final Honour Schools St Hilda's was ranked between 26th and 29th every year from 2000 until 2007 except 2005 when it came 19th. The Norrington Table is obviously flawed, but it gives a rough indication of comparative standards with which few people would disagree. If Merton were to claim 'very high academic standards' nobody could use to Norrrington Table to disagree with the statement. See also 'Merton tops Oxford college table': in 2004 only twelve undergraduates of St Hilda's out of 101 achieved a First. A former student of St Hilda's, Alex Langridge, commented, 'Ultimately it [the admission of male students] will drive up standards at Hilda's which always languished at the bottom of the Norrington Table.' (BBC) I don't have the document to hand, and may indeed no longer have it, but I remember that one year to mark a significant anniversary of the Norrington Table a newspaper worked out the average position of the colleges since the table was devised. Harris Manchester consistently came bottom of the table and on average was placed last and St Hilda's was in penultimate position. This sentence in the article therefore seems, to me, to be making the claim that St Hilda's is one of the best academically performing colleges in Oxford, whereas it is well known that it is one of the worst. Of course, I know people who went to St Hilda's and got Firsts and indeed master's degrees with astonishingly high marks, just as I know people who got Firsts, university prizes, and studentships for doctoral study from Regent's Park, another very poorly performing part of the university, and likewise I know people who went to Balliol and Merton and got only upper seconds, but the trend is for some colleges and halls to perform poorly and for others to perform very well. Other factors indicating academic standards would of course be postgraduate results, the research done by the college's fellows, and the future destinations of graduates (such as the number going on to hold positions in universities). However, these factors are currently not measured in as readily comprehensible a manner, if, indeed, at all.

Secondly, I am not sure about the 'huge' number of Firsts in History and English. Certainly the number may be disproportionately high, but whereas proportion, my proposed measurement, can be ascertained by quantitative methods, the notion of hugeness is much more subjective. One person's 'huge' may be another person's 'large', or even 'not so large'. I might say that Sir Alan Sugar has a huge fortune, whereas another person might think that 'huge' could describe only the wealth of Bill Gates. Personally, I would feel that 'huge' should mean at least twice the average proportion of candidates achieving a First in a particular Final Honour School across the university. But that is only my view. Somebody else might think that it should be 50% more, or might reject the use of a proportion in favour of an actual number. Far more useful is the comment on the Balliol College, Oxford article, 'In 2006, 45.1% of finalists got First Class Honours degrees, a higher proportion than any other Oxford college has ever achieved'. That is a fact (although it currently lacks a source).

The final sentence looks fine and I have heard it said before, though admittedly by somebody who read English at St Hilda's. However, it would be nice to have some statistics to support it.--Oxonian2006 (talk) 20:26, 2 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Hildabeest vs Hildabeast

edit

I think the usual spelling is Hildabeast, not Hildabeest.--194.80.206.97 (talk) 14:56, 10 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

It was always Hildabeast when I was there! Not sure why that has been removed, it's common knowledge in Oxford- see http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&rlz=1B3GGGL_enGB243GB243&q=st.+hilda%27s+hildabeasts&btnG=Search&meta= Gingernut1015 (talk) 19:34, 1 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

St Hilda's College, Oxford

edit

Hello, I am Communications Manager at St Hilda's College, Oxford and would like to request some updates to the page. The Principal's correct title is Professor Sir Gordon Duff. The College had 395 undergraduate and 204 postgraduate students in 2014.

I would also like to update the 'History' section, as the last two (8 and 9)endnotes in the paragraph are broken. Could the last two sentences be deleted and replaced with:

In October 2007 a supplemental charter was granted and in 20080, male students were admitted to St Hilda's for the first time. The College now has almost equal numbers of men and women at both undergraduate and postgraduate level. In August 2015, the interim Norrington Table showed that 98.2 per cent of St Hilda's Finalist undergraduates obtained at least a 2.i in their degree.

The coat of arms for the College has been refreshed and I have attached the correct version.

 
St Hilda's College

I would like to send some replacement images for the gallery. Please could you advise what sort of files are preferred? Many thanks.HildaWhitby (talk) 15:56, 9 December 2015 (UTC)Reply

Hi, thanks for posting. I have a brief reply as I'm limited on time, we do not use Professor in titles on wikipedia per the WP:Honorifics guideline. Similar we say Stephen Hawking, rather than Professor Stephen Hawking. I will have a look at the content you mention. The best way to update the image gallery is if you are able to upload to wikimedia commons. Preferably, if you own the images and you can release the images under a free use license, see commons:Licensing. Will get back with a longer reply soon. Aloneinthewild (talk) 20:03, 9 December 2015 (UTC)Reply

Invitation to Women in Red's Role Models editathon on Women's Colleges

edit

Please forward this invitation to all potentially interested contacts

 
Welcome to... Role Models meetup and online editathon

Facilitated by Women in Red
Help us to spread the news

  • 8 March 2017: In-person meetup at Newnham College, Cambridge University
     
     
  • Whole of March: worldwide multi-language online edithon for all
  • Focus: Notable women from women's colleges and related institutions
  • Inform your communities of the need for their support.
  • Contribute in English or in your own language

Apologies for cross-posting and sending in English
(To subscribe: Women in Red/English language list and Women in Red/international list. Unsubscribe: Women in Red/Opt-out list)

--Ipigott (talk) 12:05, 22 February 2017 (UTC)Reply