Student facilities
Adam Farley (Letters, August 17) suggests that Edge Hill University should invest in student facilities. Perhaps the £60 million we have spent on campus developments over the past decade and the £220...
Adam Farley (Letters, August 17) suggests that Edge Hill University should invest in student facilities. Perhaps the £60 million we have spent on campus developments over the past decade and the £220...
The TaxPayers' Alliance ("V'cs attack tax-cut lobby's 'Mickey Mouse' criticisms", August 24) has simply selected broad keywords, such as food, leisure, tourism and equine - billion-pound industries...
Alan Ryan presents what has become an orthodox, mildly covert critique of the post-1992 new university sector (Opinion, August 17). He suggests that this sector, although he avoids naming it...
My anger turned to sadness when I read Alan Ryan's article. In the 1960s, as an 11-plus failure and without an O level in mathematics, I gained a Teachers' Certificate followed by a BEd. During my...
Your article on institutions' research council success rates ("Manchester leads the cash bonanza", August 24) quotes me as saying that Cambridge University has recently woken up to the opportunities...
Peter Lawrence rightly inveighs against the "audit society" that has resulted from assessing scientists by bibliometrics and impact factors ("Popular beat may drown out genius", August 24). In 1966,...
Dr Chav began his article ("Who are you calling a thicko prole?", August 17) with an excellent point. Academe's contempt goes beyond white working class boys to what they represent, and what was...
Open Space events were definitely not pioneered in the UK by Westminster University, as was suggested by your recent article "Circular route to event" (August 3). Open Futures in Edinburgh has held...
Your front page story "Awesome teaching may be a dead end" (August 24) superbly reflects the utter madness of the current research-obsessed regime in universities. We have record numbers of students...
The US-led 'liberation' of Iraq was neither politically nor economically inspired, insists John Gray, but rather a messianic experiment driven by Christian millenarianism Towards the end of the past...
Revelations that some administrators and universities in the US were profiting from links with loan companies have rocked America's student financing system. Stephen Phillips examines the impact of...
Craig Roberts has a hobby that might sound an awful lot like his work: the behavioural biologist was recently bitten by the beekeeping bug. Still, he tells Olga Wojtas, they keep him sweet Craig...
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