Singapore university’s 20-year enrolment a challenge for staff
Tan Eng Chye reflects on how pioneering lifelong learning programme has fared in its first year
Tan Eng Chye reflects on how pioneering lifelong learning programme has fared in its first year
Uncertainty over funding and the movement of foreign students to megacities will spur institutional mergers, says Bert van der Zwaan
International student mobility policies around the world don’t address sustainability or inclusivity, survey finds
Jonathan Mirsky applauds a bold attempt to take the long view of Chinese history
Trend for ‘shorter and closer’ overseas study options among Japanese students puts premium on demonstrating educational value, EAIE conference hears
To meet the country’s ambitious student recruitment targets, UK institutions should make better use of data showing the return on investment of their degrees, writes Louise Nicol
Underinvesting in universities in the face of international competition and political upheaval will be to countries’ social and economic detriment
But academics question the logic of consolidating three institutions in different locations
McLaren Applied Technologies director sees need to go ‘beyond STEM’, THE-Ulsan summit hears
The author of An Appeal to the Ladies of Hyderabad: Scandal in the Raj on gods, villains and Bond, libertine Britons in colonial India, and capturing ephemeral events
The University of London’s new vice-chancellor reflects on her Canadian working class roots, leadership lessons from local government and her time in 10 Downing Street
Chinese students’ misunderstanding of their host society thwarts their efforts to integrate in Australia, says academic
Australian report warns against fetish for interdisciplinarity, citing increasing specialisation of subfields
India is far from realising its potential, but it’s showing promising signs of moving in the right direction, as are some other countries around the globe, writes Ellie Bothwell
The reputation of Australia’s universities varies by subject