Sir John O鈥橰eilly to quit as top HE and science civil servant Sir John O鈥橰eilly has announced his resignation as director-general for knowledge and innovation at the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills By Paul Jump 3 November
Living wage in universities 鈥榙emonstrates HE's values鈥 Universities must pay the living wage if they wish to be seen as a force for good in their communities, a senior academic has argued. By Jack Grove 3 November
Online learning at school 'prepares students for university' Studying a subject online for two years at secondary school prepares young people for the learning expectations of university, research has found By Chris Parr 2 November
For-profit buy-out bonanza forecast The for-profit education sector is likely to boom over the next few years, an investment bank has predicted By Jack Grove 1 November
Bristol appoints new vice-chancellor Hugh Brady, formerly of University College Dublin, to take over from Sir Eric Thomas By Jack Grove 31 October
Purcell hit by Plymouth UCU 'no confidence' vote Union members at Plymouth University have given their vice-chancellor, Wendy Purcell, a vote of no confidence. By John Morgan 31 October
Cambridge v-c: immigration attitudes and policy harming UK The vice-chancellor of the University of Cambridge has criticised the 鈥渆ver more parochial鈥 attitude to immigration in the UK. By Chris Havergal 31 October
York to dock pay for staff joining UCU action The University of York鈥檚 plans to withhold pay from staff joining a union marking boycott over pension cuts have been criticised as 鈥渂ullying鈥. By Jack Grove 31 October
Parents' education 鈥榟as greater effect鈥 in unequal countries Earnings gap greater in UK and US, suggests Institute of Education research By Chris Havergal 31 October
Glasgow 鈥榬eassures鈥 students and staff on fossil fuel work The University of Glasgow has insisted it remains committed to teaching and research on fossil fuels as part of its work in science and engineering By Chris Parr 30 October
Teacher training full-time posts 鈥榰nder threat鈥 UUK report warns over consequences of switch to School Direct By John Elmes 30 October
The rise of non-elite journals The proportion of top research papers published in elite journals has fallen over the past 18 years, according to research from Google By Holly Else 30 October
Warning of a 鈥榳inter of discontent鈥 over university pensions Institutions told that UCU members are prepared to 鈥榙ig in鈥 on pensions reform ahead of November marking boycott at 69 campuses By Jack Grove 30 October
Minister accused of complacency over fall in Indian enrolments James Brokenshire labelled 鈥榮illy鈥 as he defends immigration policy despite traffic from the subcontinent dropping by half By John Morgan 30 October
Campus close-up: Imperial College London 拢20.1 million donation creates Brevan Howard Centre for Financial Analysis to answer big questions about the financial crisis By Holly Else 30 October
Overseas PhD students rely on rankings to select a university Prospective students seek an institution in the top 200 but 鈥榖rand personality鈥 is a puzzle to them By Paul Jump 30 October
Student book-collecting prizes celebrate creative classification Anthony Davis, the sponsor of prizes at Oxford and the University of London, explains why this form of bibliophilia must be encouraged By Matthew Reisz 30 October
How to stand out from the flock on Twitter Engaging with others can help you through a PhD and into a job, says Eva Amsen, outreach director for F1000 Research By John Elmes 30 October
鈥楥ampus at sea鈥 vows to weather financial storms US non-profit Institute for Shipboard Education hopes to plot safe course through rough financial waters By Chris Parr 30 October
Hopes rise for 鈥榮omething big鈥 on postgraduate funding A thinktank has released modelling based on a popular proposal for a state-backed loan scheme By Jack Grove 30 October
Utopian Universities: reflections on radical beginnings Leading scholars discuss seven institutions created in the Sixties By Matthew Reisz 30 October
Huddersfield staff development may be like the Gulag, but it gets results Deputy vice-chancellor Peter Slee describes the demanding approach that has led to rising standards By Chris Havergal 30 October
GPA system could lead to lower marks for women in STEM Use of American system involving first-year marks may have 鈥榙epressive effect鈥 on student grades By Jack Grove 30 October
EU鈥檚 national systems need more alignment, conference told Discussion focuses on how European universities can move beyond the Bologna Process and compete at a global level By Chris Havergal 30 October
Warwick鈥檚 Thomas Docherty could face 拢50,000 legal bill The professor who was cleared of charges of undermining authority faces substantial costs after hiring barristers for tribunal By John Morgan 30 October
Privately educated gain 拢1,500 salary premium Schooldays have an influence on graduate pay, according to report from Institute for Fiscal Studies By Chris Parr 30 October
Cut departmental selfishness to cut costs, report advises Delft University of Technology report says universities could reduce estates footprint by 25 per cent via more space-sharing By Jack Grove 30 October
Spending on subscriptions to journals rises by up to 50% Freedom of Information requests reveal substantial hikes in university outlay despite open access push By Paul Jump 30 October
Warwick staff call for action over pension fund Staff assembly backs motion calling on management to block employers鈥 plan for USS By Jack Grove 29 October
Maths key to lack of women studying economics, says study The small number of women taking maths at A level may explain why only about a quarter of economics students are female, a new study says. By Jack Grove 29 October
Durham to run criminology classes in prisons Students will join prisoners in what the institution says is a European first By Chris Havergal 29 October
Scottish government switches student support spending to loans Amount spent on bursaries and grants cut by almost 拢40 million last year By Chris Havergal 28 October
University Alliance names new chief executive Whitehall civil servant Maddalaine Ansell has been named as the next University Alliance chief executive By John Morgan 28 October
QAA clears Anglia Ruskin after 鈥榙umbing down鈥 complaint Former employee made claims about standards on electronics course By Chris Parr 28 October
University lecturers to boycott marking over pensions row Staff at older universities will begin a marking boycott next week in a row over pension changes By Jack Grove 27 October
Artists shouldn't be 鈥榗olonised鈥 for impact, scholar says The pressure for academics to deliver 鈥減ublic engagement鈥 should not lead to them 鈥渃olonising the creative arts鈥 By Matthew Reisz 26 October
Teacher training review: Ucet highlights importance of academic route Student teachers must still have the option of taking an academic qualification alongside their classroom training By John Elmes 25 October
Thomas Docherty 鈥榙eeply moved鈥 by support Thomas Docherty, the University of Warwick professor suspended in January, has thanked his supporters after allegations against him were dismissed By John Morgan 24 October
Next government must 鈥榩rioritise鈥 new HE law, says Hefce Higher education legislation should be a priority for the new government after 2015, according to England鈥檚 funding council. By John Morgan 24 October
鈥楥heap, pathetic gestures鈥 on immigration harming HE A business leader has said he is 鈥渁ppalled鈥 to see universities end up as 鈥渧ictims of political point-scoring鈥 and a 鈥渕eaningless鈥 migration target By John Morgan 24 October
University applicant numbers down for early deadline The number of UK students applying to medical and dentistry schools, veterinary courses and Oxbridge has fallen by 5 per cent, new figures show. By Jack Grove 23 October
Northern Irish universities warned over major cuts Reports that thousands of student places could be cut By Chris Havergal 23 October
Ten 鈥榓cademic鈥 words that have just made it into the dictionary New edition of Collins English Dictionary contains raft of new terms By Chris Parr 23 October
University levy on graduates could end taxpayer 鈥榖urden鈥 - thinktank Public funding for universities should be scrapped and replaced by graduates paying an earnings levy to their institutions, according to a thinktank. By John Morgan 23 October
UK 鈥榩rivileged partner鈥 for Science Without Borders Donna Bowater reports from Rio de Janeiro on plans to extend Brazil鈥檚 international mobility scheme to 100,000 more students By Donna Bowater 23 October
Peter Piot: there is a 鈥榤oral responsibility鈥 to go out and stop Ebola The man who helped to identify the virus has encouraged staff and students to volunteer By Paul Jump 23 October
More postdocs, more data skills top biology sector wish list Early results of 2014 vulnerable skills survey by BBSRC and MRC highlight concerns and importance of multidisciplinarity By Holly Else 23 October
Future of teacher training under threat Anglia Ruskin latest to drop out as policy continues to favour school-led system By John Elmes 23 October
Temporary twinroom solution for extra first years Almost 100 freshers put in temporary accommodation after student numbers cap is raised By Chris Parr 23 October
How to choose the right journal for your paper Expert鈥檚 top tips for picking the best place to be published, from reading your target title to taking rejection on the chin. Plus the latest higher education appointments By Paul Jump 23 October
Support levels diverge between post-1992s and Russell Group Students at post-1992 institutions will receive just a quarter of the help offered by older universities By Jack Grove 23 October
Cracks show at immigration working group Key members argue that 鈥榠nnocent鈥 students need greater concessions By Chris Havergal 23 October
Are students鈥 unions backing off the hard questions? Battle of Ideas debate asks if policies of 鈥渘o-platforming鈥 make campuses 鈥榟omogeneous zones of head-nodding鈥 By Matthew Reisz 23 October