US nurse training shortage deepens
A critical shortage of nurses in the US is getting worse despite huge demand and high starting salaries because nursing schools lack the faculty and other resources to train them. An estimated 6,000...
A critical shortage of nurses in the US is getting worse despite huge demand and high starting salaries because nursing schools lack the faculty and other resources to train them. An estimated 6,000...
Canada's Dalhousie University is attempting to make its buildings scent-free on the grounds that pungent aftershaves and perfumes can damage health. The Halifax university operates a voluntary curb...
An Italian surgeon who after years abroad returned to Italy to run a new international transplant centre in Palermo, Sicily, has resigned because of dissatisfaction with the national health system....
Bjørn Lomborg, director of Denmark's Institute for Environmental Assessment, will keep his job despite breaching the "clear norms" of scientific practice in his controversial book The Skeptical...
Doctoral students should be adding to knowledge, not ticking off a list of skills learnt, says Stephen Rowland The PhD has changed. Traditionally, it was a programme of study whose outcome was a...
Former Labour education secretary and leader of the Liberal Democrats in the Lords Shirley Williams has yet to rule herself out of the race to become the next chancellor of the University of Oxford....
The peaceniks are out in force at Dundee University in the hope that BBC world affairs correspondent John Simpson will at last be able to receive an honorary degree. Work prevented Mr Simpson...
Fast food just got faster as computers have been given the ability to champion the perfect pizza. Da-Wen Sun and Tadhg Brosnan of University College Dublin have devised software that analyses the...
Imperial "look, no comma" College London this week launched its new brand identity with an outline of its characteristics. It states that Imperial's personality is "authoritative, not dictatorial"...
Six months Teaching starts with first-year medics. "So when does it drop?" asks a man being taught to take patient-centred case histories and develop his communication skills. My GP warns that home...
I was very surprised to learn that the Danish Committees on Scientific Dishonesty (UVVU) had judged that my book The Skeptical Environmentalist breached "clear norms" of scientific practice. I...
Narrow admissions policies are keeping able applicants out of university, argues Helen Connor Fair access to universities is crucial in developing widening participation and ensuring that more people...
Mike Emmerich, Gerry Stoker and Dan Corry explain why choice and market principles are key to reforms in public services The public service reform debate has become inextricably linked, in media eyes...
Are private firms the saviours of dilapidated student digs? Helen Hague opens our student special by looking at changes in UK provision. Students raised on Changing Rooms and other makeover shows...
Are private firms the saviours of dilapidated student digs? Stephen Phillips surveys the US move into upmarket apartments. Unlike the cramped communal living quarters of old, US universities now...