Quality matters, so let's get serious about it
Alan Jenkins argues for a reasoned and radical approach to raising esteem for teaching in higher education. I was delighted to see Brian Fender's recent plea for a "national debate that will enable...
Alan Jenkins argues for a reasoned and radical approach to raising esteem for teaching in higher education. I was delighted to see Brian Fender's recent plea for a "national debate that will enable...
Strong reactions greeted the arrest of Anthony-Noel Kelly, whose art involves the use of cadavers. Jonathan Sawday reflects on the issues involved Who owns the dead? What happens when the artist and...
Richard Hudson's support for abolishing the honours classification system (THES, April 11), however welcome, nevertheless concentrates on the irrationality of the process rather than the purpose it...
Jacky Turner's piece "The Vivisection Void" (THES, April 4) seemed confused. Is she arguing for more public debate about the morality of animal experimentation, or simply for more accurate reporting...
A propos of Niall Ferguson's "what ifs?" expanded in Sian Griffiths' article, "The virtual past master" - if Germany wins the second world war, Michael Foot is elected in 1983 etc. "The Communist...
Yes, it is not necessary to do research to be a fairly good and dedicated teacher (although it is hard to be an excellent teacher without an inside knowledge of research), and assiduous resear-chers...
BERNICE ANDREWS, a member of the British Psychological Society's working party on recovered memories, writes (THES, April 11): "In over 40 per cent of the detailed cases some kind of corroboration...
Doubts about whether science is, or even could be, moving towards some kind of synoptic enlightenment are one thing. Actual distrust is another. I am not sure about the reasons given by Mary Midgley...
In his very interesting article "Let there be Darwin" (THES, March 21) Russell Stannard says that the theory of relativity implies that time and space are welded together as a four-dimensional...
Groucho Marx once said that the key to success in life is sincerity, and, he added, if you can fake that you have really got it made. Dozens of institutions - and not only political parties - have...
The British Empire came to Natal last week, or at least that is what it may have seemed like to observers. The "last outpost", as Natal was once known, was host to vice chancellors on the Council of...
LABOUR has promised to reverse the brain drain, but without putting a price on the programme it says will do the job. Gordon Brown, shadow chancellor of the exchequer, told an election press...
Rome. It was probably the first time in history that lectures at Rome's La Sapienza University have been described in lurid prose day after day in most of Italy's newspapers. The two-day seminar on...
PROPOSED restructuring of Britain's Royal Observatories will cost Pounds 7.5 million over the next four years, according to the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council's latest business plan...
Philosophy of Science, Logic and Mathematics in the 20th Century