Slashing PhD prices for international students was a masterstroke
New Zealand is reaping many benefits from reducing the cost of a PhD for international students a decade ago, says Brett Berquist

New Zealand is reaping many benefits from reducing the cost of a PhD for international students a decade ago, says Brett Berquist

Senior management has its perks but it also comes with a host of new practical, philosophical, psychological and even physical challenges. Here, seven people who have lived through that fiery baptism...

The doggedness required to complete a PhD is underappreciated by non-academic employers and graduates themselves, Jeremy Wolos argues

Is the 4* researcher who is also a stellar teacher a realistic expectation? ÌÇÐÄVlog surveyed academics to find out. Jack Grove reports

Minister says the UK has much to learn from Israel’s scientific excellence and entrepreneurial flair

Lobbying government on Brexit will be key priority for new leader

Shadow industrial strategy minister says scrapping fees essential for universities' civic mission

University of Waterloo president says modern universities must combine research and creativityÂ

Financial disputes and litigation are lose-lose situations for universities and students no matter the outcome, says Ronel LehmannÂ

Government investment will address the underperforming sector but political interference needs to stop for Indian higher education to truly make its mark, argues Deepak Nayyar

While their credentials are not in dispute, institutions could have their teaching and research undermined by a crisis in morale

Twenty North American institutions using ‘moon shots’ to help focus and attract support for their scientific endeavours

As Beijing and Canberra trade blows over foreign interference and academic freedom, leading analyst predicts things will get worse before they get better

New building to offer shared facilities, broad-spectrum view for booming faculty. Plus the latest higher education jobs and appointments

The Office for Students’ arrival marks a new era of higher education regulation but it can also learn much from its predecessor's successes, argues Tim Melville-Ross