News RSS Feed Send your news, pictures & videos


Blackburn College University Centre boss resigns after suspension

QUIT Former dean Helen Mathers QUIT Former dean Helen Mathers

A HIGHER education boss has resigned from her post after she was suspended.

Blackburn College said the dean of its University Centre, Helen Mathers, was no longer on its pay roll after tendering her resignation.

Acting dean Christine Kenyon will fill the role while the posit-ion is advertised.

Ms Mathers was suspended last term while an investigation into her ‘management style’ was undertaken.

At the time, the college said there were some ‘potential’ issues over how Ms Mathers handled some aspects of her role.

According to the college, the suspension was a neutral act undertaken as part of disciplinary protocols.

Blackburn College had tasked Ms Mathers to develop programmes designed to give students skills which local employers need, as well as to develop partnerships with industry leaders.

She was also responsible for resources, recruiting staff, and maintaining and improving standards.

Principal Ian Clinton had stressed that the actions she carried out appeared to have been ‘motivated’ by, and in the interests of, the students and Blackburn College in general.

Mr Clinton said: “Further to previous correspondence I can confirm the former dean of higher education, Helen Mathers, requested leave of absence for personal reasons and subsequently has taken the decision to resign. It is on that basis that we are advertising for a new dean of higher education.

“While the position is vacant we have an acting dean to ensure the smooth running of the University Centre.

She is working closely with the two associate deans and the vice-principal. This will make sure that students are not adversely affected during this interim period.”

The £14million University Cen- tre opened in September 2009 and boosted student numbers by 300 to more than 1,000.

It offers degrees validated by institutions such as Lancaster University, but the college is in the process of securing accreditation to validate its own degree programmes.

In line with expansion plans, £7million has been approved to further expand the University Centre to focus on degree courses in sciences, technology, engineering, and mathematics, which will bring the total number of degree-level students to almost 4,000.

Comments(21)

burner says...
2:50pm Wed 8 Feb 12

I know one thing - it's NOT a University!

gazza1980 says...
4:02pm Wed 8 Feb 12

burner wrote:
I know one thing - it's NOT a University!
Wonderful insight there. You really are a fountain of guesswork...sorry, I mean knowledge

Izanears says...
4:27pm Wed 8 Feb 12

burner wrote:
I know one thing - it's NOT a University!
Spot on burner. There is a tendancy these days to give places and people fancy names/job titles. Unfortunately there never seems to be any improvement, in fact it is usually the opposite. I don't know the ins and outs of the Helen Mathers hoo-hah, but I have more than once experienced the situation where someone is brought in to 'sort things out' and then when they do, life is made difficult for them. Remember the woman who tried to sort out the EU's finances?

burner says...
6:29pm Wed 8 Feb 12

. . ."none of them claim to be full Universities " . . . . , ladysal, some KS4 pupils in Blackburn schools think it's a uni - don't take my word for it ; ask one of their teachers.
.
. . and , no, I don't have a downer on the town and certainly not the College. I am, like several posters on this site, just frustrated at the way things are run or have turned out round here over the years. My disappointments started with the demolition of our beautiful Market Clock Tower and I'm now concerned about the management of football here. I love the location of East Lancashire and , definitely, the people. That is why you and I can have this discussion - we both respect the views of others ( don't have to agree, but go ahead and say your piece in public! ). Talk again, no doubt.

wrigglers says...
6:31pm Wed 8 Feb 12

Burner you ignorant tool. It is not a university we all know this. It is blackburn college. With a building that is dedicated to delivering university standard education. Hence the name Blackburn College University Centre. What would you of called the place if you was in charge of the college campus?

HelmshoreBoy says...
7:00pm Wed 8 Feb 12

I think the insertion of a humble comma or full stop between College and University would better define the actual title of the institute. viz Blackburn College, University Centre. That way it would have a similar status to Edge Hill College at Ormskirk or Blackpool and would denote a form of affiliation to the senior Universities at Lancaster and Preston.

burner says...
8:07pm Wed 8 Feb 12

wriggers, let me explain myself better.
.
Sixth formers know all about unis and choices - no probs there.
.
Some 14 / 15 year olds talk about their ambitions ( at all levels ). Some have said that, after A Levels they don't want to go away to uni ( like their siblings ) because they can go to uni in Blackburn. "It says that on the side, I walk past it ". I've heard that and similar from teachers. So whose fault is that?

wrigglers says...
8:24pm Wed 8 Feb 12

burner wrote:
wriggers, let me explain myself better.
.
Sixth formers know all about unis and choices - no probs there.
.
Some 14 / 15 year olds talk about their ambitions ( at all levels ). Some have said that, after A Levels they don't want to go away to uni ( like their siblings ) because they can go to uni in Blackburn. "It says that on the side, I walk past it ". I've heard that and similar from teachers. So whose fault is that?
It's took a while but congrats you have got there. People can get a university standard education at the Blackburn college university centre and still have the benefit of mummy doing washing, daddy driving them here and there. As a mature student who has young children travelling to lancaster to do my degree is not an option. Which is why the UNIVERSITY centre is great.

burner says...
10:18pm Wed 8 Feb 12

You have missed the point again ,w. At 14, some think it's a University. At 18 they know it's NOT !!

wrigglers says...
10:54pm Wed 8 Feb 12

burner wrote:
You have missed the point again ,w. At 14, some think it's a University. At 18 they know it's NOT !!
14 is actually ks3 and more to the point, they might of actually thought it was a university but will have it explained to them what facilities the college offer them so will know as well as fe they also have a dedicated building to university work. I would love to know what your research was before you came out with the age range. By my reckoning those 14 year olds that you mention will be about 16 years of age at the moment, centre opened in sept 09.

burner says...
12:07am Thu 9 Feb 12

You don't reason well, do you?
.
Forget the age of the pupils ( 14 /15/16??), I didn't remember all details of this conversation ( which happened since September, this current academic year. They are still around 15 now ). . . . . and I'm sure you are right ; the staff will have corrected their misunderstanding. But I evidence it as to the pupils' perception of what the building was in their eyes. They clearly thought it was the University of Blackburn. . . . . " It says so on the side".

Graham Hartley says...
6:36am Thu 9 Feb 12

"Principal Ian Clinton had stressed that the actions she carried out appeared to have been ‘motivated’ by, and in the interests of, the students and Blackburn College in general."

Nothing wrong with that until we see that motivated is 'motivated' - a standard device used to indicate the involvement of lawyers in the matter. Also note that this woman's actions 'appear' to have been 'motivated' by worthy interests, so leaving open the option to report later that her actions 'appear' in a different light. Given such devices of language in the report, it can be no surprise that our correspondents give it such a variety of interpretations.

ladysal says...
8:54am Thu 9 Feb 12

Graham Hartley wrote:
"Principal Ian Clinton had stressed that the actions she carried out appeared to have been ‘motivated’ by, and in the interests of, the students and Blackburn College in general." Nothing wrong with that until we see that motivated is 'motivated' - a standard device used to indicate the involvement of lawyers in the matter. Also note that this woman's actions 'appear' to have been 'motivated' by worthy interests, so leaving open the option to report later that her actions 'appear' in a different light. Given such devices of language in the report, it can be no surprise that our correspondents give it such a variety of interpretations.
yes, but as they are not in possession of the full facts (and I suspect very few people are, including those who claim to work at the College), it is extremely dangerous to make assumptions as to what the actual causes of her departure were. She has gone, under what circumstances NO ONE except Helen and Ian can explain and to make accusations of bullying and or financial mismanagement such as those made by certain posters above, is extremely dangerous unless you can prove them to be true. Hearsay doesn't count. Personally I wish her all the best for the future and ask that if you want to comment on her departure, stick to the statements made in the article above. Don't forget that she or members of her family may be reading this.
Burner: its a pleasure to debate with you. I'm sure it will happen many times in the future.

Between_the_lions says...
10:18am Thu 9 Feb 12

CollegeOne wrote:
Ian Clinton is Principal of Blackburn College, Helen Mathers was Dean of University Centre at Blackburn College, the HE section of the institution.

I am a member of staff at the institution and this article is once again complete and utter spin.

The truth of the matter has nothing to do with bullying at all, I of course cannot disclose the reasons behind it due to gagging orders placed on Ms Mathers and the institution. Suffice to say the end of the financial year will cause some headaches.

Ms Mathers resigned over a month ago with a golden handshake, the reason that this has now only appeared in the paper today is that a Freedom of Information request was placed with the College within the last week on the matter by an investigative journalist to who they responded this morning. Damage limitation.
Somehow doubt a FOI request has been satisfied within the week. I am certain that any information contained in that FOI request would be denied, surely it is covered by the same alleged gagging order.

However, if an investigative journalist did receive the data requested, How did a Telegraph Hack get hold of it? he he he he he

CollegeOne says...
10:44am Thu 9 Feb 12

I was not aware of the request until informed of it, a simple search of the Internet proved fruitful on a website named whatdotheyknow.com where information has been requested on the matter, you are free to have a look yourself, it's all in the public domain

gazza1980 says...
12:11pm Thu 9 Feb 12

wrigglers wrote:
burner wrote:
wriggers, let me explain myself better.
.
Sixth formers know all about unis and choices - no probs there.
.
Some 14 / 15 year olds talk about their ambitions ( at all levels ). Some have said that, after A Levels they don't want to go away to uni ( like their siblings ) because they can go to uni in Blackburn. "It says that on the side, I walk past it ". I've heard that and similar from teachers. So whose fault is that?
It's took a while but congrats you have got there. People can get a university standard education at the Blackburn college university centre and still have the benefit of mummy doing washing, daddy driving them here and there. As a mature student who has young children travelling to lancaster to do my degree is not an option. Which is why the UNIVERSITY centre is great.
Same her wrigglers. I'm a mature student with a wife and three kids. Going to what 'burner' might deem to be a proper university just isn't an option. The university centre offers the course I want with the same end qualification, at a fraction of the cost and within walking distance from my house. The course is validated by Lancaster Uni and it is Lancaster's logo on the final certificate.

So 'burner', why split hairs on whether it should be called a university? My future job prospects are the same either way - dependant only on how hard I work and the state of the job market at the time of graduation

wrigglers says...
5:15pm Thu 9 Feb 12

burner wrote:
You don't reason well, do you?
.
Forget the age of the pupils ( 14 /15/16??), I didn't remember all details of this conversation ( which happened since September, this current academic year. They are still around 15 now ). . . . . and I'm sure you are right ; the staff will have corrected their misunderstanding. But I evidence it as to the pupils' perception of what the building was in their eyes. They clearly thought it was the University of Blackburn. . . . . " It says so on the side".
Ok now that your age point has been blown out of the water we will forget it.

And the pupils perception is quite right hence the word university. If you actually looked at what it says on the side you would see that the wording is actually Univesity centre AT Blackburn College.

It is people like you burner who have the wrong perception of the college as a whole not 14 year olds.

Graham Hartley says...
6:46am Fri 10 Feb 12

In support of the beleaguered correrspondent burner I remark that 'centre' has become ubiquitous yet the suggestion the word gives as a place of value and excellence does not extend to ubiquity.

An interesting report above, wrigglers; Blackburn has a univesity centre. Ooo r.

CollegeOne says...
9:18pm Fri 10 Feb 12

Ian Clinton is Principal of Blackburn College, Helen Mathers was Dean of University Centre at Blackburn College, the HE section of the institution.

I am a member of staff at the institution and this article is once again complete and utter spin. The truth of the matter has nothing to do with bullying at all, I of course cannot disclose the reasons behind it due to gagging orders placed on Ms Mathers and the institution.

Ms Mathers resigned over a month ago with a golden handshake, the reason that this has now only appeared in the paper today is that a Freedom of Information request was placed with the College within the last week on the matter by an investigative journalist to who they responded this morning. Damage limitation.

The link is here

http://www.whatdothe
yknow.com/request/re
moval_of_ucbc_dean

It's unusual that the institution is claiming there was no investigation in response to Mr Patels request given that there was one. When a member of staff is suspended it is plainly absurd to suggest there was no investigation into the events that proceeded the suspension.

Maybe the Telegraph should investigate?

Lankygirl says...
11:26pm Sat 11 Feb 12

wrigglers wrote:
Burner you ignorant tool. It is not a university we all know this. It is blackburn college. With a building that is dedicated to delivering university standard education. Hence the name Blackburn College University Centre. What would you of called the place if you was in charge of the college campus?
I would suggest you consider enrolling on a GCSE English Language course, particularly if you are going to accuse people of being ignorant.

Graham Hartley says...
2:34pm Mon 13 Feb 12

wrigglers wrote:
Burner you ignorant tool. It is not a university we all know this. It is blackburn college. With a building that is dedicated to delivering university standard education. Hence the name Blackburn College University Centre. What would you of called the place if you was in charge of the college campus?
What do we think of 'Blackburn (Town) Centre College With Lancaster Lite University'?

What is so wrong with 'Blackburn University'? If the quality of education presented there is good enough for Lancaster University to confirm that it's so, then it's a university.

The colleges of Cambridge and Oxford aren't troubled by this distinction.

click2find

Most popular


About cookies

We want you to enjoy your visit to our website. That's why we use cookies to enhance your experience. By staying on our website you agree to our use of cookies. Find out more about the cookies we use.

I agree