Entrance exam changes in Japan and Korea ‘part of global trend’
Demographic decline and adoption of AI contributing toward nations’ revamp of testing approaches, scholars say
Demographic decline and adoption of AI contributing toward nations’ revamp of testing approaches, scholars say
The special administrative region’s status as an international crossroads has been severely shaken by the National Security Law and stringent Covid lockdowns. But sector leaders remain buoyant about...
New Delhi could wreak considerable damage to Canadian universities by playing on Indian families’ concerns over student safety abroad, says academic
Scholars say India’s growing pool of wealthy alumni could be a boon, if institutions can tap into them
As fund records ¥60 million deficit ahead of disbursement, academics voice concern over ‘strings-attached’ model
Working together to tackle specific teaching and research needs could seed high-quality research institutes, say Diya Dutt and Sudarshan Saha
Geopolitical tensions between two superpowers force institutions to rethink collaborations forged in friendlier times
A rapidly declining student population makes closures inevitable – but scholars say where the axe falls should not perpetuate inequalities
Interest in India growing as Washington-Beijing tensions show no indication of waning, scholars say
Australian institutions plan outposts in Gujarat International Finance Tec-City
Government more likely to attract branches that are ‘very small and focused’ than large landmark campuses, scholar predicts
Proposed act to strengthen ties between neighbouring continents would be seen as too ideological and unworkable, say experts
Flexibility of guidelines for universities wanting to open outposts praised, but concerns raised over academic freedom
Directive for nine university administrators to resign ‘unprecedented’ in scale, according to researchers
Notoriously difficult entry exams may need to be amended for foreign applicants, say academics