Northern Ireland fees may jump to £5,750 in post-Browne U-turn
Students in Northern Ireland could face tuition fees of up to £5,750 a year after a U-turn by a government advisor in the wake of England’s Browne Review.
Students in Northern Ireland could face tuition fees of up to £5,750 a year after a U-turn by a government advisor in the wake of England’s Browne Review.

The use of reputation surveys in university rankings is controversial. Many do not like the combination of subjective information with objective data and there are concerns that reputation surveys...
Tuition fee levels at the University of Cambridge should be set at £9,000 from 2012-13, but students from the poorest backgrounds should be given a £3,000 discount, according to a draft report seen...

By Sam Petulla, for Inside Higher Ed
Universities will be able to save large sums on their IT provision after an investment of £12.5 million in “cloud computing” by the Higher Education Funding Council for England.
It took a challenging and very special project to tempt John Scott, the former chief executive of the Christchurch Polytechnic Institute of Technology, out of semi-retirement in his native New...
Ballots for national strikes in higher education have been delayed after a union included a typographical error in the formal notice sent to universities.

The University of Cumbria has appointed a new vice-chancellor, following a period of turmoil in its leadership and finances.
The Russell Group of large research-intensive universities has for the first time published a guide with advice on what A levels its institutions favour, suggesting that students should avoid more...
Union members at the University of the West of England are to strike over plans to cut jobs and make academics reapply for their positions.

Universities in England face a £180 million, 4 per cent cut to their teaching grant in the next academic year, along with additional cuts this year.
Via study-away sites, local partnerships, portals and fully fledged overseas campuses, ambitious universities in the West are increasingly keen to take root elsewhere. John Morgan asks how the...

What do your shoes say about you? More than you think, says Caroline Knowles. They hint at your class, job, where you live and even how you spend your leisure time

A magisterial study of radical thought has blind spots that perplex an admiring Willy Maley

Drowning in information, our predecessors stopped worrying and cut and pasted, says James Delbourgo