Will the coronavirus kill liberal arts colleges?
With admissions already in decline, Brian Rosenberg wonders whether the end may finally be nigh for many colleges

With admissions already in decline, Brian Rosenberg wonders whether the end may finally be nigh for many colleges

British Council survey suggests more than a third are still undecided about whether to continue with applications

Data suggest research related to the outbreak already numbers thousands of publications

Claire Horn applauds a study of artificial approaches to ‘family-making’ that does equal justice to both the science and social context

Rolling Stone shows how improvisation in difficult circumstances can lead to memorable results, but scholars must also be honest about trade-offs caused by lockdown, say Bailey Sousa and Alexander...

Out of the fires and into virus land, academics and institutions find myriad ways to help

We need to build on the speed and enthusiasm with which academics have embraced online teaching, argue Dawn Lerman and Falguni Sen

New paper finds STEM students scores were not negatively affected by switch to online or blending learning

Dreams will be dashed and the sector could take a decade to recover, expert warns

ANU ditches reliance on admissions scores and invites early bids from the class of the coronavirus

Other Asian nations weigh whether it is fair to test students during a time of mass disruption

Starting terms in January to avoid second-wave coronavirus outbreaks will be too costly for universities and damage students’ educational progress, says Anthony Seldon

Mauro Ferrari leaves after just four months in role following rejection of his suggestion that council launch a programme to fight Covid-19

With foreign student numbers down and forlorn hopes for a government bailout, sector’s hopes may lie in expanded domestic enrolments