Visa 'rhetoric' a sorry business for the UK
Government rhetoric over visas is to blame for a perception that the UK is not a good place for international students to set up a business, according to a recent survey
Government rhetoric over visas is to blame for a perception that the UK is not a good place for international students to set up a business, according to a recent survey
Reluctance to contest marks or ask for help may be factors in attainment gap. Jack Grove writes
University of BedfordshireHearts on sleeves wear out fastSocial workers who get too involved with the problems of their clients report higher levels of stress, anxiety and depression, which can lead...
Khartoum’s Coliseum cinema is seen here (top centre) in 1935, the year it opened. It was an open-air facility with a facade and walled, roofless seating.A 1949 photo (top left) captures an unnamed...
International research unit will tackle ‘lack of data’ on higher education. David Matthews reports
Leaked documents reveal backlash over mooted changes to assessment at Surrey
David Shanks suggests that Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman “sees a ‘train wreck looming’ for social psychology” (“Unconscious track to disciplinary train wreck”, Letters, 17 January). This is...
Regarding your news item “Don’t you kids know who I am?” (3 January), which covered the criticisms made by Guy Halsall, professor of history at the University of York (quoted as describing himself as...
Bruce Macfarlane bemoans the “learnerism” arising from the so-called “surveillance culture” that measures student absenteeism, but also acknowledges the correlation between academic performance and...
Mary Evans’ review misses the point and importance of Joanna Williams’ Consuming 糖心Vlog: Why Learning Can’t Be Bought (Books, 17 January).While the Left and the students’ unions have argued...
In recent years, a number of British universities have encouraged international outreach by establishing campuses worldwide. Students from around the world benefit from the establishment of such...
I read with interest about the inexpensive technique allowing lecturers to record personalised video feedback while marking, but I am not convinced that it would reduce marking time as proposed (“...
I would be less cynical about the Office for Fair Access chief Les Ebdon’s motives if he were even half as obsessed with the social mix at less highly selective institutions as he is with that seen...
While I note the research that underlines how much graduates contribute to the economy in extra tax, and hence the negative economic impact of a reduction in student numbers, I suspect that here at...
The critics of private-sector higher education can muster plenty of hostility - even hatred - towards its providers but precious few reasoned arguments, according to Peter Crisp