糖心Vlog

Higher education policy

Latest news and analysis on how politics and policy shapes global higher education, including funding, regulation, skills policy and internationalisation.

The Prime Minister has rejected calls to withdraw overseas university students from the government鈥檚 target to reduce net migration, saying the move 鈥渨ould not make any difference to our student migration policy鈥.

12 March

The tuition fee cap will remain at 拢9,000 in 2014-15, meaning the government is allowing most universities鈥 income to be eroded by inflation, while students鈥 grants for living expenses will be held back with a below-inflation rise.

11 March

The Labour Party has warned that the government鈥檚 drive to reduce net migration is choking off the flow of 鈥渓egitimate university students鈥 while ignoring abuse of the visitor visa route used by English language students.

7 March

The number of visas issued to overseas students has fallen by a fifth although applications for university student visas have increased by 3 per cent, according to the latest figures from the Office of National Statistics.

28 February

Confused political rhetoric on student visas threatens one of the UK鈥檚 greatest global assets, says Martin Davidson

28 February

The lack of clarity over Research Councils UK鈥檚 new open access policy is 鈥渦nacceptable鈥 and government ministers should learn lessons from the confusion, according to a House of Lords report.

22 February

The visa process can trap students in a costly Kafkaesque limbo. To improve life for foreign scholars, the sector should halt its failed lobbying over policy and focus on publicising the misery caused by Byzantine bureaucracy, argues Simeon Underwood

21 February

US president Barack Obama has said that taxpayers 鈥渃annot continue to subsidise higher and higher and higher costs of higher education鈥 in his annual State of the Union Address, and published proposals that would require colleges to meet performance thresholds to qualify for federal funding.

13 February

Michael Gove is wrong, says Chris Hackley: a return to 鈥榯raditional鈥 A levels will narrow access and do nothing to raise standards

7 February

The sector must not let claims that application rates vindicate fees policy go unchallenged, says Liam Burns

7 February

The government鈥檚 immigration policy harms student traffic from abroad and the economy, claims Shabana Mahmood

31 January

Politicians鈥 speech is often more a strategic exercise than an act of civic transparency, which can make it a turn-off, says John Corner

31 January

After 12 months as Reading鈥檚 v-c, David Bell reflects on the pleasures (and occasional pains) of leading the institution

24 January

Whether spurred by lofty research ambition or the prosaic hope that one can live more cheaply than two, universities鈥 urge to merge can bring cultural as well as organisational challenges, as recent unions show. David Matthews reports

17 January