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Tailoring teaching for disabled students ‘can benefit everyone’
As people from non-traditional backgrounds become the majority in Australian universities, a legal academic argues that efforts to accommodate them can help the old guard too
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Room for foreign degrees in Singapore despite official distancing
Private providers needed to fills gaps for working adults even as government focuses on public sector
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Scholars hope Harvard defiance spurs wider pushback against Trump
University’s refusal to concede to demands over protests and DEI despite risk of ‘grave consequences’ has led to renewed optimism among staff
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Will Coventry University sink itself in quest for reinvention?
Institution known for innovation and risk-taking faces doubts over its future but is still planning new ways to do things differently
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This is probably the worst time in history to lose faith in universities
The clever stimulation of popular resentment against the perceived elitism of higher education only leaves the masses to the mercy of oligarchs who have aced the populism game, says Saikat Majumdar
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Afghans shut out of higher education need their own open university
An internationally supported online institution could give hope to the country’s young women, now confined to their homes, says an Afghan scholar
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Nanyang: the story of one of the world’s fastest-rising universities
Rankings did not drive the Singaporean institution’s strategy, but gave the then underdog the data and visibility to enter a virtuous circle of success, explain Bertil Andersson and Tony Mayer
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Australian opposition pledges money for rural health training
Medical training a bright spot for the sector, in an election campaign mostly focused elsewhere
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Tiny preschools ‘have stricter governance than universities’
Australian university council members bear far less onerous ethical and reporting obligations than volunteer mums and dads, analysis finds
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‘Excessive’ research vetting plan ‘damages Dutch competitiveness’
Bill proposing screening of all scholars working on ‘sensitive areas’ will create ‘huge administrative burden’, leaders warn
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AI research summaries ‘exaggerate findings’, study warns
Bots’ tendency to display ‘unwarranted confidence’ and fixate on ‘pink elephants’ particularly risky in medical research, according to new paper
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Defending status quo graduate visa wrong approach, says Skidmore
UK should aim for growth in student numbers but recognise ‘opportunities to reform’ post-study work rights, finds commission convened by former universities minister
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Scientific journals should not charge to publish response articles
If a paper is published open access, responses that point out its flaws should not be hidden from readers behind a paywall, says Andrew Barnas