Avoid that four-letter word
The suggestion that prospectuses should be light on text and long on attractive images (“Message received: just keep it simple”, 4 April) reminded me of a poster that was designed for a college where...
The suggestion that prospectuses should be light on text and long on attractive images (“Message received: just keep it simple”, 4 April) reminded me of a poster that was designed for a college where...
Openness must be a two-way streetThe feature about openness in universities (“Show and tell”, 4 April) implicitly makes a point about asymmetry. If institutions are not open, how can they make claims...

While cinemagoers enjoy the Tina Fey romcom Admission - set at Princeton University - a real-life admissions furore has been unfolding in the US press. Writing in the Wall Street Journal on 5 April,...

If the UK wishes its sector as a whole to be as well regarded as its elite stars, the right balance must be found in funding

Former prime minister’s higher education policies still elicit respect and rancour. Jack Grove reports

Cross-party group will review for-profit higher education operators

Future European funding may depend on identifying how research affects women as well as men

Affluent students who miss out on elite places ‘hyper-mobilise’ to retain status

The theory and practice of tampingArguments about whether universities should place “employability at the heart of the student experience” have escalated after the announcement of a new Poppleton...

Demise of matched funding leaves majority of institutions worse off. David Matthews reports

Former prime minister’s higher education policies still elicit respect and rancour. Jack Grove reports

Report says distribution would change little if based on research council cash. Paul Jump writes
A Conservative peer and a former vice-chancellor will lead a cross-party review of for-profit higher education providers.The Higher Education Commission - a group of business leaders,...
Former president tells Chris Parr that online courses could drive down students’ costs