Teaching-only universities could make comeback in Australia
Australian minister’s call for specialisation fosters speculation that rejected idea could be resurrected

Australian minister’s call for specialisation fosters speculation that rejected idea could be resurrected

Male academics assessed more highly if they work at a top-ranked university but same bias does not materialise for female scholars

THE’s Careers Clinic series brings together the great and the good of higher education to answer a burning careers question

Universities are anxious to meet social priorities, but new demands must be properly resourced, say Jo Angouri and Jan Palmowski

Jan Machielsen considers the ‘cancel culture’ of the Counter-Reformation and its echoes today

Regulator extends existing awards, with results of reformed evaluation not due to be published until 2023

Nearly 60 per cent of four-year doctoral universities report gains in overseas student applications for autumn

Recent examples explore everything from radical vaudeville to the legacy of slavery

Trump-era rule means that visas can be blocked based on undergraduate university choices

As Conservative ministers attack sector expansion, MPs support it locally – offering potential route for sector ‘dialogue’ with party

Some people will still prefer virtual conferences, but a hybrid approach would allow part of the in-person synergy to return, says Sheldon Jacobson

Academics fear California-based company is gaining monopoly on plagiarism detection services

Perhaps, says Duncan Angwin – but probably not with an institution of similar size and standing, and not without long-term staff buy-in

Holding university showcases online makes a lot of sense, but a stir-fry banquet with colleagues beats rushed laptop lunches, says Jacob Lotinga

University of Oxford’s Sarah Gilbert and Andrew Pollard among those receiving royal recognition alongside chair of review of post-18 education in England