‘Problematic’ HE-FE rivalry over, says ex-college head turned v-c
New era of collaboration will benefit both sectors, according to leader who hopes to put ‘efficiency’ skills to good use at one of England’s smallest universities

New era of collaboration will benefit both sectors, according to leader who hopes to put ‘efficiency’ skills to good use at one of England’s smallest universities

Macron criticised over €100 million package while ‘underfunding’ higher education at home

Wave of ‘low-quality’ papers threatening to overwhelm journals and peer reviewers, preventing them from assessing more meaningful research

Success often depends on circumstance. Always beware of the leader who turns up preening themselves over their successes, priding themselves on their “method”, convinced of their infallibility, says...

The party’s enhanced power in Canberra means it can develop a more progressive agenda closer to its own values, says Andrew Deuchar

‘Third way’ approach to international students would see country strengthen educational offer but also send more of its own citizens abroad

Universities hope to build for the future by attracting students disaffected by Trump regime

Country bucks trend of declining enrolments, suggesting policy headaches Down Under matter little compared with what is going on elsewhere, analysis suggests

Critical thinking becoming ever more important in age of AI, but departments not good at showing their worth, summit hears

Yet more universities announce job cuts amid ‘financially challenging environment’


Religious institutions’ governing documents incompatible with OfS rules, says secular society

University groups urge more flexibility and funding for ‘crucial’ cross-border education in next long-term budget

Universities mount fightback against further restrictions on international students, emphasising their role in growing the economy and lack of public support for new measures

Having teaching and research under one ministry would improve policy, but it is the Home Office that could be the real problem, says Nick Hillman