Work like a scientist, don’t sound like oneA pitch or presentation is not a full paper – and squeezing in too much detail will only alienate your audience. Here are four tips to make your research easy to understand in any context Philipp GramlichNaturalScience.Careers
Teaching the unknown: how to prepare students for uncertaintyFive steps that educators can take to teach students to cope with uncertainty and respond effectively to unforeseen eventsGlenn-Egil TorgersenUniversity of South-Eastern Norway (USN)
A tool to navigate information overloadShonagh Douglas shares a tool that directs students to the specific advice they need when searching through online resources and offers lessons in how to recreate similar aids elsewhereShonagh DouglasRobert Gordon University
How to run an effective student well-being campaignFrom reaching out to the local community to making it interactive, Christina Chant offers seven tips for effectively promoting your university’s well-being servicesChristina ChantEdinburgh Napier University
Five tips for helping international students settle in their new surroundingsGanna Pola and Önay Aktunç offer advice based on their experience as advisers to international students in North CyprusGanna Pola , Önay Aktunç Near East University
What you don’t know about IP protections – but shouldFrom patents to trademarks and copyright, intellectual property is a vast field with financial and legal implications. So, get to know your university’s technology transfer office, says Itzel Saldivar Itzel SaldivarUniversity of Luxembourg
A robust complaints process for students working in NHS placements Students training as health and social care workers must be supported to speak up about complaints or concerns from practice settings. Helen Carr outlines a clear processHelen CarrCanterbury Christ Church University
Voting counts: how to get more students to the ballot boxYoung people are less likely to vote than any other age group, so what can institutions do to engage students with the most fundamental of democratic processes? Rebecca Deegan shares some lessonsRebecca DeeganI Have A Voice
The changes to the National Student Survey could prove disastrousThe removal of well-being-centric questions and the ability to compare with previous years will impede universities’ ability to offer adequate supportHarriet Dunbar-MorrisThe University of Portsmouth
From personal to professional: incorporating sustainability into your university workPractical advice for embedding sustainability issues into broader professional practice, taking lessons from teaching English language that are applicable across other disciplinesPeter BuckleyThe University of Edinburgh
How to tell if your university is making a genuine effort to increase diversity There is zero doubt that bias pervades the HE system. Universities need to show they are taking it as seriously as they take publication and other key performance areasKeon WestGoldsmiths, University of London
How to raise the bar on the teaching section of your CVFrom not burying the teaching section to developing a broad range of experiences, Emma Williams gives tips on making your CV shine when applying for a lectureshipEmma WilliamsEJW Solutions
Challenges and opportunities of the 60-year curriculumLifelong learning for a post-digital-transformation, post-Covid world will need a degree of intention, design and flexibility universities do not yet offer, writes Jeff Grabill Jeffrey GrabillUniversity of Leeds
How to encourage gender equity in interdisciplinary research A study into gender balances of interdisciplinary research teams shows that the presence of women is beneficial up to a point. Elisabeth Browning suggests ways funders and institutions can encourage their participationElisabeth BrowningElsevier
Are block teaching and universal design for learning compatible?On the face of it, comparing the block teaching planning format with the UDL framework might seem like weighing apples against oranges. In fact, they share six golden links, as Kevin Merry explainsKevin L. MerryDe Montfort University
Read this before you write your abstractThe abstract is arguably the most important element of a scholarly article, so it should be informative, meaningful and impactful. Michael Willis gives two objectives, and practical tips, to keep in mindMichael WillisWiley
A unique approach to designing robust, calculation-based online assessmentsDesigning open-book, online assessments for subjects relying on calculation poses a challenge to educators. Amit Navin Jinabhai presents a model he has successfully applied to minimise student collusionAmit Navin JinabhaiThe University of Manchester
Dos and do-overs: reflections on life as an early career researcherReflecting on her time as an early career researcher, Edzia Carvalho looks back at the things she did successfully – her dos – and the things she wishes she had done from the start – her do-overs – to help others embarking on the same journeyEdzia CarvalhoUniversity of Dundee
How to use ChatGPT to help close the awarding gap Academics must put their fears of AI aside and understand how it can be employed to bridge attainment gaps in their programmes, say Dean Fido and Craig HarperDean Fido, Craig HarperUniversity of Derby, Nottingham Trent University
When promoting academic integrity, start at the root of the problem Ethical behaviour can be promoted by raising awareness of what constitutes bad practice, enforcing harsh penalties and placing cheating in a wider contextVictor MarkusNear East University
Five things I learned from my trip to Parliament as an early career researcherAfter getting a chance to present her PhD and postdoctoral research to politicians in Westminster, Lucy Eddy shares her five key takeawaysLucy Eddy University of Bradford
Business school recruitment: disrupt to diversifyA genuine commitment to championing greater equity, diversity and inclusion in business education demands a paradigm shift, says Arnold LongboyArnold LongboyLondon Business School
Show off students’ employability with e-portfoliosWhy and how to make e-portfolios a central part of university courses, helping students identify and exhibit skills that will appeal to employers, by Lourdes Guàrdia and Marcelo MainaLourdes Guàrdia, Marcelo MainaOpen University of Catalonia (UOC)
How to build quantitative evidence of your teaching expertiseTeaching impact can be difficult to measure but by sharing insight, resources and teaching materials online, you can start to build quantitative evidence of your expertise as Philip Leftwich explainsPhilip Leftwich The University of East Anglia
Building the future: the case for inter-faculty learningLaunching an innovative inter-faculty way of working has brought great benefit to students, especially in the post-Covid period, say Gemma Ahearne and Matt MurphyGemma Ahearne, Matt MurphyUniversity of Liverpool
Ten actions to improve the experiences of Black students within UK universitiesPatrice Seuwou outlines 10 steps UK universities can take to achieve greater transparency and fairness for Black studentsPatrice SeuwouUniversity of Northampton
It’s time to end the negative narratives surrounding foundation studentsFoundation students are often seen as somehow lacking, but we can challenge the stereotypes around their knowledge and backgrounds to force positive changeChristina Delistathi University of Westminster
Amplify the authentic student voice in university marketingAny university can claim to be the best, but in the end, people will believe the students who study there. Here are tips on collaborating with students to create marketing content that amplifies their authentic voiceAri BadlishahThe University of Edinburgh
Campus webinar: The keys to a successful academic careerThree female academics in Europe, the UK and Australia give their advice on how to land a promotion, networking for introverts, how much you should be publishing – and answering the question: ‘Should I quit?’Sarah Ivory, Catherine Léglu, Kylie Message-Jones Australian National University, University of Luxembourg, The University of Edinburgh
We cannot lose touch with touchClassroom delivery is evolving alongside new technologies such as VR and the metaverse, yet students are still excited by the touch and feel of things. Here are suggestions for instructors to bring the tactile back to teachingAravind ReghunathanBournemouth University
THE podcast: career advice, LGBTQ+ in the academy and public speaking tipsHear from Ray Crossman, an out university president living with HIV in the US, about his career path, and Brian Bloch, a presentation and communication expert, on how to improve your public-speaking skills Raymond Crossman, Brian BlochAdler University, University of Münster
ChatGPT and AI writers: a threat to student agency and free will?If we resign ourselves to thinking that resistance is futile and allow AI to replace students’ voices, we are surely guilty of abandoning our responsibilities as educatorsAdrian J. WallbankOxford Brookes University
Parliamentary inquiries and lobbying explainedMartin Smith offers an overview of parliamentary inquiries and lobbying for academics, looking at who is involved, how effective it can be and what results it can offer beyond direct policy changeMartin SmithGoldsmiths, University of London, Universities Policy Engagement Network (UPEN)
Social mobility via social media: opportunities for career servicesFour practical suggestions for how university career services can make greater use of social media to support social mobility among their studentsWilliam E. Donald, Kaz ScattergoodUniversity of Southampton, Ronin Institute, University of Liverpool
If I redesigned UK higher education, I would…Pay-as-you-go modules? Choose-your-own first year? Glenn Fosbraey looks to the blue sky for (sometimes radical) ideas for improving the HE experienceGlenn Fosbraey University of Winchester
Techniques for managing and learning from failure in academiaFailure in academia does not have to be entirely negative – it can provide an opportunity to grow, build resilience and is an essential part of the self-improvement processGustavo Espinoza Ramos University of Westminster
Practice makes perfect and other networking tips for academicsThe benefits of networking for academics and how to do it well, both in person and online, explained by Eleanor HennigeEleanor HennigeThe University of Edinburgh
Don’t jettison traditional academic writing just yetAcademic writing is transforming – into comics, podcasts, installations – but that doesn’t mean bog-standard peer-reviewed papers are less key to institutional status or individual promotion, writes Pat Thomson Patricia ThomsonUniversity of Nottingham
Top tips for choosing a PhD SupervisorÖzge Özden lays out the pros and cons you need to consider when choosing a PhD supervisor, as well as five key qualities to look out forÖzge Özden Near East University
Intersectionality is the only way to nurture academics of colourFinding the blind spots in EDI efforts will more effectively support academics sitting at the intersection of minority identities. Here are three places to startWajeeha Aziz , Raheela Awais, Melody Obeng , Ellie Harrison University of Sussex, University of Liverpool, University of Sheffield
With an ‘epidemic’ of poor mental health, what can universities do to help?Practical guidance for universities on how they can support the growing number of staff experiencing challenges relating to mental health and well-beingMeredith WilkinsonDe Montfort University
A teaching-research nexus to guide your course developmentThree steps to create a map of a university programme’s teaching-research integration, in order to identify weaknesses and strengths and inform course developmentNikolas Dietis University of Cyprus
Full circle: using the cycle of teaching, module design and researchHow research, module design and classroom delivery in creative fields inform one another in circular and essential practices. Glenn Fosbraey shares his own teaching as a case study Glenn Fosbraey University of Winchester
Arts-based methods to foster participatory and interactive learning Arts-based methods in university teaching centre individual human values and relationships as key contributors in learning. Anne Pässilä and Allan Owens offer advice on how this can be achievedAnne Pässilä, Allan OwensLappeenranta–Lahti University of Technology LUT, University of Chester
Matching technology training to industry needs: a case studyProfessional development courses, especially in rapidly developing technologies, must evolve to meet industry needs. Here, Daniel Garrote explains how his institution created a master’s in the Internet of ThingsDaniel Garrote Nuclio Digital School
Compassionate teaching for students with ADHDSmall but considered adaptations to teaching can support students with ADHD to succeed at university. Fiona S. Baker lists modifications that can make all the differenceFiona S. BakerDurham University
What higher education can learn from school and further education teachingAs universities strive to improve teaching, they should look to schools and further education colleges for lessons in effective pedagogy and student engagement, write Russ Woodward, Tim Veal and Nicola PattinsonRussell Woodward, Tim Veal, Nicola PattinsonUniversity Centre Grimsby: The TEC Partnership
It’s crucial for universities to bridge the ‘town and gown’ divideJames Derounian considers how universities act as good neighbours to their host communities and recommends a simple exercise to break free of the ivory towersJames DerounianUniversity of Bolton
Get started with virtual reality for learning and teachingFree, accessible resources are readily available for educators who want to add virtual reality to their teaching tools. Start small, be realistic and persist, says Siân ShawSiân Shaw Anglia Ruskin University
Should we be worried? An educators’ introduction to the metaverse What is it and what might it mean for the future of education? Paul BaileyJisc