UK immigration: farce, then tragedy? Racist government policies hurt the higher education sector, says Kevin Fong, but the harm doesn’t stop there 8 May
Meetings: counting the minutes Hate meetings? You need them more than you think, says Sally Feldman 1 May
What’s Klingon for ‘impact’? I’ve had it with university enterprise: beam me up, Scotty, says Christopher Bigsby 24 April
Scholarships? Aid? Let’s make a deal US institutions, students and athletes must strike the right arrangements to stay afloat, says Alan Ryan 17 April
Fashion has been stitched up Its study is not frivolous, and it deserves academic recognition, says Sally Feldman 20 March
Grains of truth In the midst of a desert, Shahidha Bari finds a wellspring of scholarly inspiration 6 March
You make me feel brand new Editor’s Note: In some weeks, changes in higher education are of sufficient moment to warrant extended treatment. We are happy to devote this entire edition of The Poppletonian to just such a development By Laurie Taylor 6 March
Sizing up a colossus An eccentric approach helped build the Oxford University Press empire, argues Felipe Fernández-Armesto 27 February
Greater London: the capital as city state Malcolm Gillies on why the metropolis could (and perhaps should) go it alone 20 February
Knowledge is power – but what about horsepower? Novice car-buyer Kevin Fong on the value of preparing students for real-world challenges 13 February
The lecture: more than the sum of its parts Sally Feldman dissects the benefits of an old-fashioned but pedagogically rich practice 6 February
Ashes to ashes, universities to dust Universities are now like Jeremy Bentham, hollow husks of their former selves, laments Christopher Bigsby 30 January
Teaching we can do; learning’s out of our hands What parents and schools fail to do in 18 years is unlikely to be accomplished in a couple of courses, says Alan Ryan 23 January
Mind your own FoI business! Shocking new statistics reveal that our university leads the field in the number of times it has refused to answer Freedom of Information requests By Laurie Taylor 16 January
Serendipitous scholarship Evidence is vital, but don’t reject intuition, Felipe Fernández-Armesto says 16 January
Retirement planning: it’s about more than money Academics face distinctive choices when they retire, says Malcolm Gillies 9 January
Religion and democracy: never the twain Sally Feldman on UUK’s attempts to reconcile incompatible truth claims 19 December
Art and science: ‘two cultures’ with shared values Forcing students to choose sides leaves them, and society, poorer, says Christopher Bigsby 12 December
Good reasons for UK students to study in the US Generous funding and quality tuition make US universities an attractive choice, says Alan Ryan 5 December
Does a high price always mean high quality? Malcolm Gillies on contradictory attitudes to soaring fees and value for money 21 November
Austen’s powers revisited Sally Feldman welcomes a modern reimagining of the incomparable Jane 7 November
Lecture abroad? Talk to my avatar Christopher Bigsby struggles to see the point of travelling to give a lecture 31 October
James Madison and an ungovernable America Blame the ‘father of the Constitution’ for the mess in the US, says Alan Ryan 24 October
What we should ask on student feedback forms Felipe Fernández-Armesto on the inanity of questionnaires assessing teaching 17 October
Blurring boundaries of confidentiality Malcolm Gillies hesitates before marking any documents ‘For your eyes only’ 10 October