Tribal languages are given a new lease of life
Sheldon G. Weeks describes a literacy programme for minority languages in Botswana. Twenty-six languages are spoken in Botswana, but before the country's independence in 1966 the British colonial...
Sheldon G. Weeks describes a literacy programme for minority languages in Botswana. Twenty-six languages are spoken in Botswana, but before the country's independence in 1966 the British colonial...
A study into the exploitation of Aboriginal designs for commercial gain is yielding practical results, says Geoff Maslen. After ten years of battling to prevent the plundering of Aboriginal artists'...
Svava Bjarnason and Patrick Coldstream reflect on the theme of this year's ACU conference for vice-chancellors and principals. Our cliches point to our preoccupations. The phrases "knowledge society...
Wachira Kigotho reports on an environmental advocacy programme that is making an impact in Tanzania. Tanzania's rich biodiversity is threatened by logging of rare hardwoods, charcoal burning on the...
Philip Fine describes a Canadian scheme that offers a way of entering university on the strength of experience. Canada's Prior Learning Assessment (PLA) Centre has the ability to reach out to a wide...
Martin Ince outlines the work of Environmental Consultancy Services. Academics with a concern for the environment want to change the world as well as observe it. At Northumbria University they are...
Kenneth Asch examines the legacy of the retiring principal of McGill University in Montreal. In January this year, Bernard Shapiro, principal of Montreal's McGill University, opted for early...
Unlocking the process by which the body renews itself will help scientists tackle disease and give us a better understanding of ourselves, says stem-cell pioneer Roger Pedersen, who famously quit the...
Spain's campaign against separatist bombers has had a big impact on a quest to preserve the Basque language, reports Jackie Urla. Are language rights human rights? And if so, what do these rights...
I am horrified that medical schools may be compensated for losses in their teaching grants provided they take students with lower-grade A levels ("Losers could regain grants", THES , August 22). To...
Paul Taylor's belief that "research demonstrates the subject expertise one would hope essential" in higher education is touchingly quaint (Letters, THES , August 1). Neither Quality Assurance Agency...
Angela Pinter alleges that I have suggested that criminal tendencies are fixed and can be diagnosed at birth (Letters, THES , August 22). At no time have I ever put forward such a ridiculous claim....
The upward trend in A-level and GCSE results has implications for mature graduates seeking to study medicine. Students obtaining five grade As at A level in the 1980s was unthinkable, yet some...
Damian Green's suggestion that our degree courses are "not proper academic courses" is insulting to the students who work hard to achieve their award and wrong ("Mickey Mouse list is 'ignorant'",...
Alice Farrands uses questions about Iraqi weapons to argue not that scientists can easily be caught in the political crossfire, but that "their ostensibly technical advice is inflected by their own...