Peter Scott (educationalist)
Sir George Peter Scott FAcSS is a British educationalist and the former Vice-Chancellor of Kingston University in Kingston upon Thames in southwest London.Life and career
Scott studied modern history as an undergraduate at Merton College, Oxford and was a visiting scholar and at the University of California, Berkeley Graduate School of Public Policy under a Harkness Fellowship. He then worked as a leader writer for The Times, and began writing for the Times Higher Education Supplement in 1971. He went on to serve as its editor from 1976 until 1992 when he was appointed Professor of Education at the University of Leeds and Director the university's Centre for Policy Studies in Education. He also served as the university's Pro Vice-Chancellor from 1995 to 1997. He concurrently served on the Lord Chancellor's Advisory Committee on Legal Education and Conduct from 1994 to 2000, and later was the vice-chairman.
Scott was appointed Vice-Chancellor of Kingston University in 1997 and took up his post there in January of the following year.
He holds strong views about the need for administrators rather than academics to govern the activities of universities, calling administrators the "key profession" in higher education in his April 2009 speech to the annual conference of the Association of University Administrators. In May of that same year the World Intellectual Property Organization rejected a complaint by Scott that an internet domain name—sirpeterscott.com—registered by a former Kingston University lecturer constituted a trademark owned by him and that the lecturer did not have the right to use it. The lecturer was subsequently convicted of harassing Scott via the website; the conviction was later set aside, and he was acquitted in a re-trial.
Scott stepped down as Vice-Chancellor of Kingston at the end of 2010 to become Professor of Higher Education Studies at the Institute of Education, University of London. He also writes on educational issues for The Guardian.Honours
Peter Scott was knighted in 2007 for "services to education". He is a member of Academia Europaea and the Academy of Social Sciences, and has received the following honorary degrees: