#HEAconf17: are graduates really pulling up the ladder?
Calls among graduates to limit student numbers are not selfish, but may instead reflect concern about the value of university education, say Duncan Watson and Robert Webb

Calls among graduates to limit student numbers are not selfish, but may instead reflect concern about the value of university education, say Duncan Watson and Robert Webb

Gill Seyfang - who is presenting at the Higher Education Academy's annual conference - explains how improv comedy in lectures can inspire students

Experienced sector figure to leave UUK post in September for powerful new regulator
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It is imperative that the government stop repeating the mistakes of the past when it comes to teaching assessment, says Roger Brown

State school pupils from the UK will be heading to university in the US this September

Call for rankings to give more weight to societal impact

A look at the split metrics suggests that some universities may have benefited from having a more advantaged student cohort

Academics who take regular breaks from assessment will get more done than those who toil away for 10 hours straight, study says

Threshold freeze bites while poorest graduate ‘with largest debts’ of £57,000 on average, researchers warn

Sydney’s deputy v-c says government must put its money where its mouth is

The extraordinary dynamism that characterises higher education in East Asia, Southeast Asia and Oceania merits detailed analysis, says Phil Baty

The universities of China, Singapore and South Korea are among the world leaders in some STEM fields, but will they expand their strength into other disciplines? asks Simon Marginson