Odds and quads
Although unauthorised by English Heritage, this blue plaque marks the site of the infamous gig that marked the birth of UK punk rock.In 1975, the Sex Pistols were formed by singer Johnny Rotten,...
Although unauthorised by English Heritage, this blue plaque marks the site of the infamous gig that marked the birth of UK punk rock.In 1975, the Sex Pistols were formed by singer Johnny Rotten,...
A new publication reveals how the world of cloak-and-dagger operatives is run. Matthew Reisz writes
Teaching focuses too narrowly on management techniques, says expert. Melanie Newman reports
Students at the University of Wolverhampton are being promised the chance to become digitally literate "global citizens" ready for the job market under a revised curriculum.The university will...
ItalyRooftop occupationItalian environmental scientists have spent weeks on a rooftop in Rome in protest at job cuts imposed by the Government. Some 200 workers at the Institute for Environmental...
Four-year degrees threatened as US institutions look to save time and money. Jon Marcus reports
ROYAL SOCIETYThe Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship scheme supports scientists and engineers at an early stage of their career and is designed to help researchers progress to permanent academic positions...
Angela Murray has pioneered a method to turn base dust into precious metals, and has formed a spin-off to exploit it
The vice-chancellor of Bangor University is to retire in October 2010. Merfyn Jones became the university's sixth vice-chancellor in 2004, and has also been head of the School of History and Welsh...
Let's learn from the Olympics and allow departments to pick the areas that feed into rankings, argues Richard Rose
Dumbing down threatens our culture, yet a managerialised academy can do nothing to arrest the decline, warns Kevin Sharpe
The pockets of excellence picked out last year are putting their windfalls to good use, Zoe Corbyn finds
The academy promises to play a vital role in the UK's economic recovery this year and must demand more financial support, asserts Paul Wellings
Ian Searle argues that public funding for education focuses too heavily on the young and not enough on older learners
The centuries pass, but for universities some things stay the same: the pursuit of knowledge has always had to fight for elbow room with the pursuit of money. Musing on the topic, Sir Curtis Price,...