UK’s 600K overseas student target ‘still achievable’
New ‘international education champion’ predicts numbers will continue to grow despite Covid and Brexit, but modes of delivery will alter
New ‘international education champion’ predicts numbers will continue to grow despite Covid and Brexit, but modes of delivery will alter
Democrat boost in and around university campuses may help deliver on tuition-free promise
Data from THE World University Rankings suggest universities in Netherlands, Germany and Switzerland get far more per academic
Linguistic framing of coronavirus on campus by management has dodged a proper assessment of risks to students and staff, writes a UK academic
Australian study-abroad alumni mull improvements as ‘enforced immobility’ leaves mobility programmes in limbo
But it’s important for universities and scholars to continue pursuing links as ‘tensions’ will remain, says Harvard academic
Covid is no reason to ease off on demands for open knowledge, Australian forum hears
Our regular look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers
Alternative option proposed by UK admissions service would see students applying before receiving results but selecting preferred choice afterwards
The popular conception that US academics are uniformly liberal fails to take into account universities’ subject breadth, says John R. Thelin
States pursuing new models to overcome old institutional objections
Parent institutions have increased their share of business school earnings, but external circumstances are putting pressure on that model
Scientists say pandemic-related restrictions call into question Westminster government’s claim that face-to-face tuition is vital for mental health
THE’s new Careers Clinic series brings together the great and the good of higher education to answer a burning careers question
Suzanne Rivera receives both praise and abuse on social media in response to offer but says she will continue to defend rights to assembly and free speech