Inside Higher Ed: Out presidents
By Scott Jaschik, for Inside Higher Ed

By Scott Jaschik, for Inside Higher Ed
The cost of studying for the “key professions” would soar under proposals for graduate contributions tabled by the business secretary, Vince Cable, the main lecturers’ union claims.The University and...
Political interference could put freedom of speech in universities at stake, says Matthew Reisz
Eleven higher education institutions have been awarded government funding to conduct research into sustainability and energy use in the sector.The Higher Education Funding Council for England...
Data provided by Thomson Reuters from its Essential Science Indicators, January 2000-April 2010 Asia rankWorld rankInstitution Papers CitationsCitations per paper155 Pohang University of Science and...

Producing graduates who are critical thinkers requires teachers who can bring scholarship and leadership to the academy. It is vital that we find them, says Paul Ramsden
It is a familiar lament: teaching excellence is doomed never to be rewarded as handsomely as research success - if at all. But some institutions are determined to tackle the pedagogical deficit....
Be it on the pitch or on the stage, performance is king and the passion it arouses is key to why Dominic Shellard loves the theatre - and football
Many academics feel anxious about approaching and working with a publisher. Katharine Reeve, who has been on both sides of the fence, dispels myths about the publishing process and offers advice on...

Don MacRaild salutes a witty, readable and epic journey through the many-hued past of the Emerald Isle

Robert Eaglestone finds little narrative fire in a gossipy account of a life-shaping relationship
This book is a valuable contribution to the burgeoning study of sport in a global perspective. Focusing largely on the "Big Four" sports in the US (baseball, basketball, American football and ice...
Rachel Carson was not the first to suggest that the chemical fog produced by modern industry was carcinogenic. But her prodigious feat of synthesising a jumble of scientific and medical information...
Stephen Bales welcomes a comprehensive challenge to a reductionist reification
Norman Stone's "personal history of the Cold War" is an informative, entertaining and often provocative account of world affairs from the fall of Winston Churchill in 1945 to that of Margaret...