Nurses call for better training and resources
Nurse training belongs in higher education, students this week told the Royal College of Nursing Congress in Harrogate. Labour wants to educate 6,000 extra nurses over the next three years and...
Nurse training belongs in higher education, students this week told the Royal College of Nursing Congress in Harrogate. Labour wants to educate 6,000 extra nurses over the next three years and...
Former Scottish Office education minister Lord James Douglas-Hamilton is introducing a private member's bill in the House of Lords that would effectively abolish tuition fees for all Scottish...
THE government is to review the role that training and enterprise councils play in delivering its lifelong learning agenda. Education secretary David Blunkett told MPs on Wednesday that he wants a...
Threats of compulsory redundancies for five civil engineering staff at Queen Mary and Westfield College have been dropped. Initial plans are for three staff to go to posts elsewhere and two to stay...
Institutions must consider the possible impact of joining the European Monetary Union, the Higher Education Funding Council for England warned this week. If the UK joins EMU, prices will become...
University research and development received a significant boost in this week's budget with measures aiding higher education institutions and the private sector. Top among Chancellor Gordon Brown's...
Universities and colleges will open their doors to thousands more higher education students under government plans to create a high-skills workforce. Prime minister Tony Blair has called for a...
Government policies for expanding higher education came under fire from academics, writers and administrators at a conference on dumbing down last weekend. The conference, organised by LM magazine...
Quality chiefs are trying to scotch the perception that widening participation to higher education lowers the calibre of university students with a new "kitemarking" scheme for Access to Higher...
The teaching quality assessment system (TQA) was designed to increase rigour when it was set up in 1995. It was to widen the net to catch failing courses, and to provide a clear early warning signal...
Are teaching quality assessments pointless? In the first of a two-part series, Phil Baty looks at the evidence. The credibility of the teaching quality assessment has been shaken badly by its...
Graduates are less happy in their jobs than people with fewer qualifications, according to research by Andrew Oswald and Jonathan Gardner at the University of Warwick. "Those with more schooling and...
Simon Lilley's "Dr Deadpan's bag of tricks" (February 26) said that a paper by Stephen Linstead of Sunderland Business School on how kitsch affects scientific/ social scientific thinking as well as...
Researchers in Manchester are on the hunt for a toddler and his stay-at-home mum or dad to take part in a diary study to shine light on language development. Staff at the new Max Planck Child Study...
Two Aberdeen University zoologists are to carry out the first nationwide survey of fruit bats in Madagascar, with the aim of putting them on the conservation agenda. Research fellows Clare Hawkins...