To admit, to pass and to fail
Most students now apparently get a 2:1 of some sort. How this has come about perhaps matters less than what to do in the future. A levels are changing, and we should start looking ahead and introduce...
Most students now apparently get a 2:1 of some sort. How this has come about perhaps matters less than what to do in the future. A levels are changing, and we should start looking ahead and introduce...
My faculty board is being recommended to adopt a quadratic scaling procedure in place of the present linear scaling method. The justification provided is that "the advantages of quadratic scaling...
If the Universities Superannuation Scheme is looking for a way to spend some of its (our?) surplus sensibly ("Conflicting interests in the grey market", THES June 9), then employing a few more staff...
It was disturbing to learn our colleges and universities are living "under a black cloud", submerged in "a wave of scandals", while I have been blissfully unaware of any such "cloud" or "wave" ("...
John Sutherland's article "Double your money" (THES, June 16) has one big drawback, namely that what he writes about is still moonlighting. Having recently done some teaching outwith the university...
Elaine Williams writes that when David Hockney was a student at the Royal College of Art, he was supposed to complete a written assignment, but refused ("An optical disillusion", THES, June 16) . Not...
Jeffrey Richards's article demonstrates that a confusion common in the popular press has emerged in academia (Soapbox, THES, June 16). This is encapsulated in his opening sentence: "Hollywood is at...
Parita Muktainterview accuses the Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh of being a "paramilitary organisation" (Soapbox, THES, May 19). The HSS is a national organisation and has been a registered charity in...
Is Newcastle dumbing down by offering lower A-Level entrance standards to some state school pupils? No, says James Wright. It is interesting to be attacked one Friday by the deputy prime minister for...
The gene sequence of a cress will have a huge impact on agriculture. Clare Sansom reports. Any day now the draft sequence of the human genome will be completely published. It will be seen as the most...
Imagine choosing a shoe style on the net, sending your digital foot and waiting for delivery - welcome to rapid manufacturing. Within the next ten years rapid manufacturing will largely replace...
A Canadian team is using a non-surgical procedure to enable severely diabetic people to throw away their insulin. Philip Fine reports. A Canadian team has successfully treated ten severely diabetic...
Strathclyde University engineering student Neil Black wants to make sure that travel is cool for cats, writes Olga Wojtas. Mr Black, a fourth-year student in Strathclyde's design, manufacture and...
One of the seats of Stone-Age civilisation in the British Isles has just become even older. Experts have been able to date the settlement of Star Carr, where the first evidence of wood-working and...
Age does matter when we're talking about earth, finds Cherry Lewis. How old is the earth? In 1899 the age favoured by most geologists was 100 million years (Ma), although estimates ranged from 3...