US colleges drop fees to poach students from neighbouring states
Amid steep demographic declines, competition replaces cooperation for institutions that rely heavily on local populations
Amid steep demographic declines, competition replaces cooperation for institutions that rely heavily on local populations
‘Absolutely not’ the case that home undergraduate places are being constrained, says outgoing head of admissions service
First-ever federal exemption under 1972 anti-discrimination law clears path for Baylor University to escape sanctions from students claiming abuse
Gender gap reflects workforce patterns, not success rate bias, as women gradually boost their share of the spoils in an increasingly competitive ‘game’
Institution critiqued for ‘pre-emptive self-censorship’, perhaps to avoid falling afoul of government
Once bit players in Australia’s clinical trial landscape, universities are now easily the most prominent sponsors
University increases support for those who suffer harassment in media and online after work ‘weaponised’
As attentions turn to manifestos for the coming election, higher education should ramp up communication with MPs and ministers, says Anne Milton
Experts weigh in on whether the Meta-owned app, which has soared in popularity since its launch, could ever replace Twitter, or X, among scholars
While domestic student numbers are declining, India’s vast underserved student cohort offer solutions for both nations, says Kyuseok Kim
Walailak’s loss of faculty seen as a grim omen for sector haemorrhaging academics
The mutual suspicion of autonomous bureaucracies ignores the multifarious needs of living, learning, maturing young people, says Harvey Graff
Following the removal of a question on overall satisfaction, Times Higher Education analysed the results to produce an overall ‘positivity measure’
£1.7 billion venture with developer aims to sidestep pitfalls of university innovation districts and create jobs in deprived Greater Manchester towns
Independent panel agrees Baden-Württemberg should stop charging overseas learners, but its chair predicts ‘avalanche’ of fees-for-all could follow