US Republicans allege bias in prestigious scholarships
House education committee, in new front for attacking academia, backs right-wing analysis that alleges political tilt in Truman and Rhodes awards
House education committee, in new front for attacking academia, backs right-wing analysis that alleges political tilt in Truman and Rhodes awards
Economist questions whether private institutions’ focus on profitable social science subjects matches labour market demands
After nationwide failure to stop their presidents from arresting student demonstrators, college instructors ponder which approaches – and friends – they can turn to
Professor faces dismissal from Leiden after reports of inappropriate behaviour, also involving her husband, spanning more than three decades
Ministers urged to resist policies that will ‘massively overcorrect’ student numbers as key migration statistics unlikely to reflect reality of institutions’ declining enrolments
Royal Society and British Academy back increase in education research spending after study reveals funding gap compared to health
Identity politics’ 1960s progenitors had a level of nuance and erudition that today’s EDI activists would do well to emulate, says Martin Levy
Those of us who stay on post-study give far more to our adopted country than we have been able to give to our home nations, says Elena Rodriguez-Falcon
Academic says he has ‘never seen anything like it’ after being told that classroom cameras were being used without his knowledge
Education secretary uses Education World Forum speech to praise benefits overseas students bring as government considers making changes to the graduate visa
Ahead of proposed enrolment caps, foreign earnings fail to prevent a slide further into the red
Announcement made as world’s largest gathering of education and skills ministers gets under way in London
Leading university technology transfer offices hope blueprint will lead to faster deals and rapid upscaling
Number of black principal investigators applying to UK research councils halves year-on-year
Nation’s historically high level of shutdowns and consolidations overwhelmingly remains a private-sector malady, but states showing signs that old certainties may fall away