Opinion

Scrapping the UK census would damage social science and weaken the evidence base for state funding decisions, warns Andrew Miller

4 October

University food is not what it used to be, laments John Gilbey, but perhaps it is not too late to make it glorious once again

27 September

Clegg voiced doubts about scrapping tuition fees before the election but failed to sway party activists, says Philip Cowley

27 September

Susan Bassnett says that many play fast and loose with foreign students

20 September

If universities aren't spared the local council levy on new development, their communities will suffer, warns John Cater

20 September

Joining Greek colleagues in Athens in a forlorn protest against cuts to the academy prompts Dennis Smith to wonder who may be next

20 September

Research data published online must be accessible to allow scrutiny by other academics if we are to prevent fraud, says Geoffrey Boulton

13 September

The journal review system's lack of transparency worries Stephen Mumford

13 September

Aspiring journalists must learn to ask probing questions of digital data as well as people, recommends Louise Byrne

13 September

In education as in nature, feedback should lead to change, says David Boud - and courses must be reshaped to allow it

6 September

Removing the cap on student numbers does not imply a collapse in standards, argues Steven Schwartz - just look at Australia

6 September

Fellow humans, pay attention: algorithms are reshaping research from the inside out and we have barely noticed, warns David Beer

30 August

To work best, the market in outreach work needs a balance of competition and cooperation, says Graeme Atherton

30 August

Alan Ryan on the benefits of emigration for the UK’s huddled student masses

23 August

With Adrian Smith leaving BIS, former Whitehall insider David Bell considers the qualities his replacement will need

23 August

Christmas can come early if universities tap the wisdom of the emeriti, argues Angela Thody (with help from Charles Dickens)

23 August

Universities see the value in having more say in A-level design, but questions remain about the organisation and scope of reform, says David Bell

16 August

Lars Fischer on why losing round one in the REF impact fight means it's time to get off the ropes and hit back

16 August

Ken Pounds ponders whether the Mars Science Laboratory's success will revive public interest in going boldly where no one has gone before

16 August

Press a button and someone’s reputation dies, warns Felipe Fernández-Armesto

16 August

Flawed policy levers forced Salford to charge £9K fees to retain its widening participation aims, Martin Hall argues

9 August

Queen Mary can best serve its local community via the pursuit of global excellence, Simon Gaskell tells critics of recent 'restructures'

9 August

Transnational initiatives pay dividends far greater than a share of the overseas student market, Paul Greatrix insists

2 August

Reform of the high-stakes A level is an inherently risky business, says Mary Curnock Cook, who sees the value in a number-based scale

2 August