Forensic courses cut open for analysis
The growth in forensic degree courses has been so phenomenal that forensic scientists are piloting accreditation schemes. The number of courses with the word forensic in the title on the Universities...
The growth in forensic degree courses has been so phenomenal that forensic scientists are piloting accreditation schemes. The number of courses with the word forensic in the title on the Universities...
Plans to form a single trade union for more than 110,000 lecturers could finally be given the go-ahead at next week's annual conference of the Association of University Teachers. After resisting...
When 22-year-old Yimon Aye first arrived in the UK from Burma four years ago, she had never seen a test tube or switched on a bunsen burner. With prizes for excellence at chemistry from Oxford...
If you sound like a cat being strangled when singing, help could soon be at hand, writes Natasha Gilbert. Mark Smith, head of Purdue University's School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, in the...
Research by the group that discovered the gene that tells people they have had enough to eat could lead the way to a more practical treatment for obesity, writes Martin Ince. Steve Bloom of Imperial...
Chemist Carolyn Carr took a ten-year career break to look after her two children. She said many women in her position felt it was impossible to break back into science. "One big problem is getting...
An £800,000 science centre will be the keystone of the government's new strategy to encourage women to pursue careers in science. Its tasks will be to recognise and reward good employers, raise the...
Further education college heads have warned that foundation degrees are being developed too quickly and are in danger of being hijacked by universities eager to pocket funding for expansion. A...
Industry is making unrealistic demands on universities, researchers have told the Treasury-initiated Lambert review of links between business and higher education. The Association for University...
The first national aptitude test for UK entrepreneurs and prospective businesspeople has identified serious knowledge gaps that could contribute to commercial failure. The test was devised by Colin...
France's elite Ecole Nationale d'Administration (ENA) is to lose its monopoly on recruiting and training top civil servants and senior diplomats under reforms proposed by a committee appointed by the...
South Africa's school-leavers rate the University of Stellenbosch as their most desired study destination in South Africa, according to a survey of popular campuses. Stellenbosch was picked by 22 per...
Extra funding for a European Union scheme to create virtual campuses will increase from €5.4 million (£3.7 million) to €8.1 million if changes made by the European Parliament to a planned 2004-06 e-...
Increasing numbers of Australian graduates are leaving the country to escape having to repay their deferred tuition fees or to make enough money overseas to cover the bill, a report concludes. The...
The Canadian government has given C$41 million (£17.7 million) for Arctic research. The money will help to refit an icebreaker and support study of the ecosystem and climate impacts of melting ice in...