Timing quirks determine winners and losers from Australian caps
Process for limiting international student recruitment ‘like a game of musical chairs’, Senate committee hears
Process for limiting international student recruitment ‘like a game of musical chairs’, Senate committee hears
Tens of thousands enrol because of low tuition fees and scholarships, but some face discrimination on arrival
Play celebrates the turbulent career of a pioneering female astronomer
Mandating longer study abroad stints will sideline the students who benefit most and cannot manage independent travel, practitioners warn
Boosting access to higher education is important, but closures and mergers will create better institutions for students to attend, says Manigandan Ganesan
Financial challenges facing institutions mirror those plaguing Treasury, asserts PhD-bearing science secretary, who jokes he ‘wouldn’t wish a doctorate on my own worst enemy’
Proposed Australian caps show how quickly policy environment can change, says new Manchester v-c, who has just made the switch from Down Under
Improved fortunes of UK-based researchers follows return to Horizon Europe, but grantee numbers are still much below pre-Brexit levels
Former universities minister agrees with King’s principal that ‘now is the moment’ for fee increase
More than 70 institutions shortlisted in record-breaking 20th anniversary for coveted sector awards
New institution founded by conservative figures as an alternative to ‘censoriousness’ of established universities
Serving minister and former prime ministerial aspirant to lead capital city university
Regional institutions hope to benefit as they are handed quotas higher than current numbers at expense of rich Group of Eight universities. But will effect of the policy merely put students off...
Next year’s review must consider why the equality charter now views ‘gender as a spectrum’, in addition to questions of cost and effectiveness, says Lucy Hunter Blackburn