Graduate salaries to rise as competition hots up
The average graduate starting salary is expected to increase for the first time in two years, a report has predicted – but graduates face more competition for jobs.The summer edition of the...
The average graduate starting salary is expected to increase for the first time in two years, a report has predicted – but graduates face more competition for jobs.The summer edition of the...
The purpose of higher education needs to be more than preparing students for jobs if we are to avoid a future where “people know their place and stay there,” according to an outgoing vice-chancellor....

World university rankings may be 'simplistic' but they offer comparative information that is otherwise unavailable, writes Phil Baty
Senior academics have carried out their threat to resign from the Arts and Humanities Research Council's peer review college in a dispute over "Big Society" research – and are now calling on...
The threat of up to 200 compulsory redundancies at Middlesex University may lead to a ballot for industrial action, a union has warned.Jenny Compton-Bishop, branch secretary of Unison at Middlesex,...
Michael Farthing, vice-chancellor of the University of Sussex, has been announced as the new chair of the 1994 Group.Professor Farthing will succeed the outgoing chair, Paul Wellings, vice-chancellor...
For-profit higher education providers could “really strike a chord” with students worried about the value for money of traditional £9,000-a-year degrees with “ridiculous” long vacations, according to...
More than 40 senior academics have said they will resign from the Arts and Humanities Research Council's peer review college on June if the council does not take "clear steps" to remove references to...
It is time to extend R.H. Tawney's 1922 vision of universal secondary education to universal access to tertiary study, argues Simon Szreter, and also to reject the coalition's fatally misguided...

With scholars exploring digital platforms to make their work more available, Matthew Reisz looks at possible replacements for the monograph

At a Unesco forum, Matthew Reisz hears about the hunger for libraries, corporate creep, and what should and should not be archived on the net

Seemingly lunatic exploits by eccentric explorers had a serious purpose, Robert J. Mayhew finds

Ronald Hutton welcomes an ambitious study of post-medieval society's leap into the darkness
To judge a book by its cover (which is what book covers are for, of course), the reader of this book, given its 3D, blocky, Pop Art-style yellow-on-orange lettering, might expect witty, irreverent...
This is a surprising book. One approaches an analysis of the inner workings of the Civil Service with something approaching trepidation. Of course it's an important topic, but how much will one's...