Process as irksome as proposal, as Sydney staff strike again
Disquiet as sandstone university hires interstate corporate lawyer to bargain on bosses’ behalf
Disquiet as sandstone university hires interstate corporate lawyer to bargain on bosses’ behalf
Although some institutions spoke out during China's crackdown on the ‘white paper’ protests, others did not, notes Shaun O’Dwyer
Taking turns seen as sensible way to bring balance to solo roles, as new law debated by parliament
It makes no sense for the country’s new wave of medical schools to be permitted to cater only for overseas students, says Juliet Wright
Long-fought campaign by members finally secures union a seat at the negotiating table
Using Twitter to call people out has landed Jo Grady in potential legal trouble, but will a combative communications strategy force leaders into making concessions?
As Deakin plans first overseas outpost on Indian soil, it says the learnings will flow both ways
Agencies created to help institutions improve themselves, then asked to guard federal student aid, now face fight over battling partisan attacks on academia
Vice-chancellors must challenge populist ideas around who belongs to the nation and whether equity goals can end at its borders, says Srila Roy
Additional fees to institutions that breach OfS rules may focus attention on growing regulatory costs
Leading US public institution found by news investigation to still hold bones of 9,000 people, most in nation, more than three decades after federal ban
Lengthy government security checks on STEM postgraduates are causing chaos for university research as doctoral candidates go elsewhere, says Russell Group
英国大学协会委托开展的民意调查发现,64%的受访者希望海外学习者的数量增加或维持稳定
British professional basketball player turned US professor James Gerard Noel says criticisms of ‘safe spaces’ overlook the emotional vulnerability of black students caused by racism and gun violence
International students in particular are likely to rate the value of their course, despite paying higher fees