Do the maths: Cetls' contributions add up (3 of 3)
While the £315 million funding for the Cetl project was the largest of any recent initiative that failed to improve university teaching standards, it is by no means unique.Greybeards and silver...
While the £315 million funding for the Cetl project was the largest of any recent initiative that failed to improve university teaching standards, it is by no means unique.Greybeards and silver...
Your report on a global study of academic salaries ("You won't get rich (but you might get a free turkey)", 22 March) notes that academic moonlighting is rife in low-paid countries. The reality is...
Ruth Deech has done a great service by highlighting the failures of some universities to respect the laws that protect students on campus from intimidation, harassment and defamation ("Hate has no...
Steve Fuller objects to being called an anti-evolutionist and then goes on to name Pierre Teilhard de Chardin as one of the heroes of his book, Humanity 2.0 ("The Darwin delusion", Letters, 8 March)....
Steven Rose claims that Mark Pagel's Wired for Culture is full of contradictions and misunderstandings, but this is actually more characteristic of Rose's review than Pagel's book (" 'Brain candy' is...
Regarding "Journalistic prejudice" (22 March). The article, about Australian media issues, is written by a Melbourne-based author...but the flag above it is New Zealand's. Granted, they are similar,...
The growth in the proportion of young people participating in higher education has stalled after years of steady increases, according to new figures.

By Susan Woodward, for Campus Review
Lecturers from post-1992 universities in London are joining school teachers in a walk-out to protest against changes to their pensions.

Plans for students to apply to university after getting their grades have been abandoned in the face of opposition from schools and universities.
Universities have once again seen a rise in philanthropic donations, but there are warnings that a cap on tax relief announced in last week’s Budget could stop this progress “dead in its tracks”.

The National Audit Office has called for tougher action against overseas students who are breaking visa rules, prompting Universities UK to warn that “legitimate concerns about immigration” should...

By Kaustuv Basu, for Inside Higher Ed
Higher fees for UK master’s courses are deterring students from continuing their studies and the deterrent is strongest for those from poorer backgrounds, according to a new study.

Four learned societies have written to the prime minister to protest against plans to reduce the resources of the Lords Science and Technology Committee.