Australian universities face losing funding if students fail
Institutions face stiff fines and worse for breaches in student support policies, as government courts sceptical opposition
Institutions face stiff fines and worse for breaches in student support policies, as government courts sceptical opposition
New models beckon after ‘golden age’, sociologist predicts, as source countries seek to plug skills haemorrhage
With 55,000 missing predicted grades, universities looking to fill places via clearing hope to convince those who missed out to recalibrate
From Coldplay to Queen, the world’s biggest bands often meet as students – yet universities are seldom mentioned in song. Jeremy Clay ponders why and unearths some lost exemplars – including a long-...
The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media
Debates about international student numbers are highly politicised. But the contribution they make is far more nuanced than any statistics allow
Trip Down Under seen as a positive sign for international education on both sides of the Tasman
Critical care medicine professor explains why she was compelled to write the remarkable tale of how students, scientists and doctors united to fight polio 70 years ago
ONS moves to improve student flows data seen as opportunity to separate international recruitment from UK’s toxic politics
Scholars say India’s growing pool of wealthy alumni could be a boon, if institutions can tap into them
Minister hints at punishment with unprecedented letter to National Science Centre over project exploring the role of bondage and domination in the development of trans identities
对超过4600名受访者的调查结果显示,全球新冠疫情期间学术不端行为率急剧上升
The Ucas data also shows that the number of international students accepted on to courses also fell
Their value previously unquestioned, Nordic universities have tended to enjoy happy relations with governments despite close state control over them. But a surge of support for populist parties in...
If A-level grades are only ‘reliable to one grade either way’, where does that leave admissions officers deciding on borderline cases, asks Dennis Sherwood