Svoboda | Graniru | BBC Russia | Golosameriki | Facebook
Skip to main contentSkip to navigation

Higher education

September 2024

  • Sonia Sodha

    Academic free speech is too crucial to be used as a political football by left or right

    Sonia Sodha
    Labour is wrong to put on hold a law that aims to protect staff from external pressures
  • Exterior of the US supreme court building, a white ornate building with columns

    Elite US colleges see Black enrollment drop after affirmative action strike-down

    Amherst College and Tufts University report lower number of Black students this year as white enrollment increases
  • Three people stand on a sidewalk holding a large purple sign reading 'SEIU LOCAL 500 ON STRIKE' as several others hold signs nearby

    Unions in higher education are surging, new report reveals

    An estimated 38% of graduate student employees are now in unions as ‘unionization becomes a tactic for change’
  • Beth Riding

    Want to prove you care about young people, Keir Starmer? Give us back our freedom to explore Europe

    Beth Riding
    The scrapping of the Erasmus scheme was a mistake. But by working with Brussels, the PM can put it right, says Beth Riding, an A-level student in Cornwall
  • Students enter the University of New South Wales

    ‘International students have been scapegoats’: three perspectives on Australia’s proposed overseas student caps

    Wing Kuang, Chris Ziguras and George Williams
    The federal government’s higher education reforms have attracted criticism from across the sector
  • John Naughton

    The networker
    AI cheating is overwhelming the education system – but teachers shouldn’t despair

    John Naughton
    With adjustments to the way we teach students to think about writing, we can shift the emphasis from product to process
  • The 28th edition of the Duden, published on 12 August 2020

    Enrich your life with die deutsche Sprache

    Letters: Joan Walley on how the efforts to promote the teaching of German in Stoke on Trent are bearing fruit. Plus letters from Veronica Hardstaff and Keith Hayward
  • The Bennett Building

    University of Leicester facing ‘major incident’ over crumbling buildings

    Teaching events being relocated while urgent repairs carried out on 1970s structures with degraded concrete
  • Young staff serve drinks at a busy pub in the UK.

    UK ministers rule out joining youth mobility scheme with EU

    Report that EU proposal on work and study for under-30s could be revisited is denied by government
  • Women pushing luggage trolleys

    Afghan women arrive in Edinburgh to finish medical degrees denied under Taliban

  • 2 slices of ham in a baguette on a plate

    Two slices of ham a day can raise type 2 diabetes risk by 15%, research suggests

  • Pupils from in Neath, south Wales, collecting their A-level results last week.

    Life after A-levels isn’t easy – especially if you’re from a poor family

  • Warwick University graduates throw their graduation mortar boards into the air in celebration on the day of their graduation ceremony in in 2017

    Proper funding, not mergers, will solve universities crisis

  • Imran Khan sitting and being interviewed in front of Pakistani flags

    Imran Khan aims to be Oxford University’s next chancellor

  • Graduates throwing mortarboards in the air

    Golden age of English universities could be over, says head of watchdog

  • People boarding a train bound for London

    Have laptop, can travel: the rise and rise of the commuter student

  • Two female students and a male student standing in a kitchen

    Male UK university students are ‘less macho’ when sharing flats with women

  • Martha Gill

    A-levels are far from perfect, but in the exam hall every pupil – rich or poor – is equally afraid

    Martha Gill
    Despite the high stakes of these gruelling tests, they are still the best engines of social mobility
  • The role of chancellor is regarded as one of the most respected and coveted roles among senior members of the British establishment.

    Labour students make online push for Peter Mandelson as next Oxford chancellor

    Labour peer and former Conservative foreign secretary William Hague battle for role dominated by retired Tory politicians
  • Rachel Cooke

    Notebook
    Are studies of great authors doomed as fewer students take English literature at university?

    Rachel Cooke
    Not only will literary criticism wither, but we risk losing the campus novel entirely
About 41,062 results for Higher education
1234...
Explore more on these topics