First shelf filled in Murty Classical Library of India Professor’s dream as a student is realised as library launches first five volumes in bilingual series By Matthew Reisz 22 January
Can an open-air lab tempt you to Siberia? Russia’s Tomsk State University is banking on the region’s natural assets and an English language push to attract foreign students and scholars By Stephen Hoare 22 January
UCU Left defiant on pension deal Letter urges university staff to reject new pensions offer and renew strike action, despite warnings that success is unlikely By Jack Grove 22 January
Monographs have to adapt to keep a place in the future Geoffrey Crossick, author of the report ‘Monographs and Open Access’, argues that the format is resilient but must embrace open access By Paul Jump 22 January
Careers at risk after case studies ‘game playing’, REF study suggests Submission patterns reveal how institutions responded to rules By Paul Jump 22 January
OECD’s head of education gives thumbs up to £9K tuition fee system Endorsement comes after ministers are accused by Labour of misleading Parliament By John Morgan 22 January
PGCE retains status after coalition split Recommendation in report on teacher training appeared to downgrade the value of postgraduate qualifications By John Elmes 22 January
Clamour for clarity on the reach of chief scientific adviser Academics seek to determine role of Sir Mark Walport after announcement of Nurse review of research councils By John Morgan 22 January
Professional golf degree launched in Scotland Nothing is out of bounds when it comes to higher education, it seems – with the launch of Scotland’s first degree in professional golf By Chris Havergal 21 January
Sussex told to compensate student protesters over suspensions The University of Sussex should not have suspended four students after a protest and should pay compensation, the sector’s complaints body has found By John Morgan 21 January
Gender gaps among students revealed by Ucas Figures also show 23 per cent of students now enter HE with BTECs By Jack Grove 21 January
Obama highlights college plan in State of the Union speech By Michael Stratford, for Inside Higher Ed 21 January
Many universities ‘failing to address public health needs of world’s poor’ First global health research ranking suggests only five UK institutions make major investment By Holly Else 21 January
Nobel laureates write to KAUST over Saudi flogging case Academics in Saudi Arabia have been urged in an open letter signed by 18 Nobel Prize winners to condemn the public flogging of blogger Raif Badawi By Jack Grove 20 January
Teach medical students to be critical, says Ernst Medical students must learn to think critically, an academic physician who became the first professor of complementary medicine has warned. By Harriet Line 20 January
Kent student named as Green Party HE spokesman A student at the University of Kent has been named as the Green Party’s spokesman for higher and further education By Chris Havergal 20 January
Bedfordshire joins Glasgow in fossil fuel commitment The University of Bedfordshire has become the second higher education institution in the UK to commit to not investing in the fossil fuel industry By Harriet Line 20 January
King’s College London drops rebrand plan Plans to rebrand itself as ‘King’s London’ have been dropped, principal has confirmed By Jack Grove 19 January
Carter review says universities 'key' to teacher training But report also angers some in HE over PGCE comments By John Elmes 19 January
Warnings issued over EU research budget changes The performance of the whole European research system could be harmed if changes to EU budgets go ahead, it has been warned. By Harriet Line 19 January
UK now ranked fifth on HE participation, says OECD The UK is ranked fifth among the world’s most developed nations for the number of young people with higher education, after rapid progress since 2000 By John Morgan 19 January
Libraries urged to do more with unique collections to help academics Britain’s research libraries can do far more to help their “unique” collections serve the needs of scholars, their universities and communities By Matthew Reisz 18 January
Employers ‘should participate more' in HE provision Employers should have more of a say in the design and delivery of the curriculum at universities in order to produce “work-ready” graduates By Joe Sandler Clarke 17 January
Universities asked to provide clarity during A-level upheaval The head of Ucas has urged universities to “move quickly” and make clear how they intend to ensure fair admissions in the light of A-level reforms By Times Higher Education Staff 16 January
Ed Miliband urges action on student voter registration Labour leader also pledges to say more on HE policy ‘by time of manifesto’ By John Morgan 16 January
DfE body will fund teacher training students for 2015 NSS U-turn follows Hefce pledge to underwrite inclusion By John Elmes 16 January
Greg Clark criticises ‘dumbing down’ comments on diversity Science and universities minister says more must be done on issue By Paul Jump 16 January
New USS pension reform plans to be put to union vote University staff will not resume a marking boycott this week after employers put forward amended plans to reform the sector’s biggest pension scheme By Jack Grove 15 January
Comparing degree standards: assumptions to be ‘re-tested’ Three of the UK’s funding bodies want to “re-test assumptions” about the importance of comparability of standards across the sector’s institutions By John Morgan 15 January
Alumni Rich List: top 20 UK higher education institutions for graduate salaries Find out which institution’s graduates are earning the most money By Chris Parr 15 January
Nature publisher to merge with Springer The publisher of Nature is to merge with the world’s second largest science publisher, Springer By Paul Jump 15 January
Universities give out more firsts and 2:1s The number of students awarded a first-class degree soared by 14 per cent last year. By Jack Grove 15 January
Part-time student numbers continue to dive Part-time student numbers have continued a dramatic decline after falling by 8 per cent last year, new figures show By Jack Grove 15 January
Extra-curricular activities now ‘more important’ to university applications Most admissions staff believe achievements outside the classroom are more important to gaining a university place than 10 years ago, a new study says By Jack Grove 15 January
Sheffield Hallam head Philip Jones to retire The vice-chancellor of Sheffield Hallam University, Philip Jones, has announced that he is to retire next spring By Paul Jump 15 January
Terror bill ‘incompatible’ with coalition’s stance on free speech after Paris attacks Lawyer says government condemns terror attack on Charlie Hebdo but legislation could have a ‘chilling effect’ on campus debate By Joe Sandler Clarke 15 January
Study abroad in rich countries pays higher dividends Skills of business students on internships in low-income nations do not develop as much as those in other regions By Chris Havergal 15 January
Tribunal of sacked swimming pool ‘bust-up’ Salford leader settled University settles Adrian Graves’ employment tribunal claim after vice-chancellor leaves By John Morgan 15 January
Fine arts suffer class bias in National Student Survey, study says Researchers argue that nature of teaching in subjects means that they cannot score highly in survey By Joe Sandler Clarke 15 January
Graduates’ salary premium People of working age with a master’s or PhD earn on average £9,000 a year more than those with only a bachelor’s degree, according to data from the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills By Holly Else 15 January
Senior leadership teams should include fundraising professionals Incoming Case president Sue Cunningham says that move would herald ‘real engagement’ and help to drive success By Chris Havergal 15 January
Come shine at the Diamond Light Source The UK synchrotron seeks more university groups to set up second homes at the site to create a genuine research campus By Paul Jump 15 January
Foreign students used as ‘pawns in a political game’ Theresa May criticised after Home Office proposes new rules for overseas cohort By Chris Havergal 15 January
Will Cuba roll out the welcome mat for US students? American universities review exchange programmes as 50-year embargo ends By Jon Marcus 15 January
Row between ‘forced exit’ scholar and NTU reignites Nanyang Technological University president’s claim that tenure dispute was ‘not political’ contested by ex-faculty member Cherian George By John Morgan 15 January
Nigel Piercy has to submit student emails for vetting Scrutiny of Swansea dean’s communications follows latest email furore By Paul Jump 15 January
Sector doubles its Stonewall 100 share UK universities claim 10 spots in annual survey of gay-friendly workplaces By Jack Grove 15 January
Are you a victim of hierarchical microaggression? Majority of workplace slights informed by your place in the academic pecking order, study finds By Chris Havergal 15 January
Scots rush to offer shorter degree courses Three-year programmes challenge the supremacy of Scotland’s ‘gold standard’ By Chris Havergal 15 January
Small victory for Cambridge women in long war over gender pay gap Women on academic contracts earn £8,400 less than men, according to Equal Pay Review 2014, but the gap has closed by £110 since 2012 By Holly Else 15 January
How to move up from a researcher post to lecturer Report advises young academics to foster personal and research independence to advance their careers. Plus the latest higher education appointments By Holly Else 15 January
Wendy Purcell only a figurehead at Plymouth after stepping down from helm FoI request reveals former vice-chancellor returned after suspension on full pay despite diminished powers By John Morgan 15 January
Universities ‘ignoring’ sexual harassment issue, says NUS The National Union of Students has accused universities of being ‘prepared to ignore’ incidents of sexual assault and harassment on campus By Joe Sandler Clarke 14 January
Will Self: freedom of speech a ‘fetish’ in wake of Paris attacks Freedom of speech has become a “sexual fetish” in the West in light of the Charlie Hebdo terror atrocity, according to academic and writer Will Self By Joe Sandler Clarke 13 January