Office for Students (OfS)
Regulator yet to conclude investigation into philosopher鈥檚 departure from Sussex despite renewed focus on free speech issues
Cambridge philosopher appointed to oversee free speech in English universities has been unusually quiet since starting the role. Might changes seen as 鈥榗lipping his wings鈥 force him to be more vocal?
University required to report to English watchdog as it addresses quality concerns relating to business and management courses
Proposed strategy sets out 鈥榠ntegrated approach鈥 to quality, built around 鈥榤ore routine鈥 Teaching Excellence Framework and possible realignment with European standards
Regulator accused of 鈥榙ereliction of duty鈥 and faces potential legal action after temporarily shutting down key processes
鈥楥hallenger鈥 institutions dealt blow as regulator temporarily shuts down processes seen as crucial for launching as a provider
English regulator responds to long-running criticism of engagement with learners
Lower than anticipated student recruitment worsening financial situation for more institutions, according to OfS analysis
University among the latest providers to be referred to National Trading Standards by English regulator
Wales鈥 groundbreaking Medr must boldly rethink how education and training work for society and the economy, says Ellen Hazelkorn
Question remain over regulator鈥檚 political neutrality and extent of 鈥榤eaningful鈥 dialogue with sector
Office for Students summarises findings from first round of reviews looking at 鈥榓reas of concern鈥 in teaching
Booming business school that withheld 20 per cent of lecturers鈥 pay unless they passed nearly all students is heavily criticised by watchdog
Man tasked with overseeing Office for Students鈥 transition says innovation, collaboration and mergers can all play a role in ensuring institutions are put on a better financial footing
The OfS鈥 approach is evolving, partly reflecting the fact that a course鈥檚 long-term value is not always immediately obvious, says John Blake
Critics warn that Health Sciences University 鈥 which incorporates chiropractic and osteopathic treatment 鈥 is ethically concerning and will mislead students and patients
It is heartening to have an education secretary who values universities as a public good, but public goods require public funding, says Jo Grady
Labour has placed its faith in better regulation sorting out the financial issues in the sector, but what tools and powers does an already overburdened organisation need to tackle its biggest challenge yet?
Departing London Met vice-chancellor says English regulator鈥檚 data-driven rules do not help socially disadvantaged students
The OfS needs only to tweak its guidance in light of the considerable free-speech duties by which universities are already bound, says James Murray
The OfS鈥 stronger than expected registration condition on sexual harassment and misconduct comes not a moment too soon, says Anna Bull
Results of Sir David Behan鈥檚 report set to shape future direction of regulator under Labour
Education secretary outlines new approach for English regulator, with focus on restoring sector鈥檚 financial health
Office for Students highlights issues with continuation and completion rates as well as graduate outcomes at range of institutions
Search for new leaders at OfS and UKRI offers chance for new government to break from the past in its approach to universities and research
Conservative peer steps down following long-running criticism of his political affiliation
Inventor鈥檚 Wiltshire-based training centre is first to go through new Office for Students process
Perhaps we need, instead, a specific tribunal to investigate and hear the most serious allegations, says Guy Micklewright
The regulator鈥檚 example scenarios fail to acknowledge the harm that even lawful speech can cause on campus, say Naomi Waltham-Smith and James Murray
Extending England鈥檚 proposed threshold for legal recourse would encourage universities to adopt delaying tactics, says Abhishek Saha
Short deadline for universities dealing with issues internally will 鈥榠nundate鈥 regulator with partially investigated cases, sector fears
Office for Students insists it has 鈥榥o recommendations of directions of travel鈥 as it seeks views on distribution of 拢1.5 billion annual budget
Universities are not doing enough to police misconduct. We need an independent register from which bullies can be struck off, says Nicholas Rowe
As high-profile case drags on, legal experts say issues regulator has faced are a harbinger of what is to come
New complaints scheme may help ensure more open debates on campuses in time but Gaza crisis necessitates action now, say campaigners
Health and social care expert to examine performance of Office for Students
But institutions may face paying regulator鈥檚 costs under new proposals outlined by England鈥檚 new free speech champion
Susan Lapworth tells business school deans that regulator has learned lessons from first investigations into quality of their provision
Regulator says subcontracting of courses becoming bigger and bigger part of the sector but there are 鈥榩otential pockets of concern鈥
Regulator鈥檚 measures of quality may have unintended biases towards certain students, regions and institutions, says Amanda Broderick
PA Consulting survey spotlights concerns on finances plus relations with ministers and regulators, but also optimism on potential solutions
New director promises political impartiality and a thorough consultation as English regulator gets ready to promote and protect expression on campus
Lords committee report delivers biting criticism of 鈥榙istant and combative鈥 English regulator, prompting calls for its chair to resign
English regulator rejects most criticism of proposals, but acknowledges that it should consider an institution鈥檚 ability to pay before it finalises costs
English regulator 鈥榤aking it up as it goes along鈥, critics say
Chief executive Susan Lapworth defends English regulator against sector criticism
Former head of Australian university watchdog says early criticism helped shape more collaborative approach
University of Cambridge philosopher takes on crucial role following the passing of England鈥檚 new free speech legislation
Revised conditions that will force universities to store millions of old essays and assignments will cost millions of pounds in annual running costs, say experts
The 鈥榯eenage鈥 regulator has a toxic relationship with universities owing to its uncompromising approach and its alleged unwillingness to listen 鈥 except to Conservative ministers. But should vice-chancellors agitating against the OfS be careful what they wish for? John Morgan reports
Minister says strong financial health of majority of institutions suggests struggles may be due to poor management, not lack of funding
A new registration condition, complaints scheme and system of penalties all require careful thought, says Jamie Roberts
Challenger institutions offer innovation and dynamism, but ignorance and monopolistic behaviour is holding them back, says Edward Venning
Universities鈥 lack of compliance with European standards raises suspicions in foreign governments that hamper expansion plans, warns agency鈥檚 chief executive
Regulator will not 鈥榩rop up鈥 any institution found to be at risk of going under as greater funding pressures start to bite
Student representatives tell Lords inquiry that English regulator more concerned with satisfying desires of government
Education secretary directs OfS to create 鈥榗ompetitive degree apprenticeship development fund鈥 in England
England鈥檚 higher education regulator takes on quality scrutiny role after Quality Assurance Agency steps back
Vivienne Stern tells Lords inquiry that trust would increase if regulator was more resistant to political direction
Figures should 鈥榗oncern us all鈥, warns regulator