Blind faith in tech bros driving cheating, say ChatGPT critics
University of Glasgow philosophers behind viral ‘ChatGPT is bullshit’ paper claim student AI use is linked to dubious techno optimism of billionaire?Silicon Valley?moguls
University of Glasgow philosophers behind viral ‘ChatGPT is bullshit’ paper claim student AI use is linked to dubious techno optimism of billionaire?Silicon Valley?moguls
Extending embargoes and permitting more exceptions are?likelier than a full U-turn, suggest academic publishing experts
All eyes are on Tohoku University and its grandiose future plans as excellence initiative gets under way, but critics question whether goals are achievable
Sector leaders say international students and researchers, funding and academic freedom at risk if National Rally wins power
Apparent elimination of longstanding regulatory process leaves higher education experts expecting more costs, complexities and confusions
A ‘jobbified’ university teaching ‘transferable skills’ and marketable degrees neglects so much that is crucial to vocational formation, says Chris Higgins
Private equity firm that owns one of the UK’s few private universities seeking to make triple its initial investment in latest deal
Nobuhle Nkabane succeeds much-maligned Blade Nzimande, who will retain science brief
Generative AI is ‘a bit like teenage snogging – everyone’s doing it although no one really knows how’
‘Outrageous impost’ to fund domestic education initiatives is ‘robbing Ranjit to pay for Richard’
After Trudeau administration imposed sharp cut in student visas, institutions are now watching other restrictions having a much stronger effect
Platform must overcome cost and participation hurdles, but would benefit readers and researchers, experts say
Sector leaders say stopgap solution needed to ensure institutions remain viable, but extra funding is likely to come with strings attached
Asian superpower hopes recruiting more French students will help its position on the international stage
But Cambridge must reform procedures that have evidently left many colleagues traumatised, says Thomas Roulet