US drafts rules granting colleges teaching flexibility
Rule-making ends with surprise pact after administration retreats from extremes

Rule-making ends with surprise pact after administration retreats from extremes

King’s College London and Aberdeen say they are reviewing honours over new law making gay sex punishable by death

THE’s data editor discusses the figures behind our coverage of shifts in global research dominance and long-term decline in humanities PhD graduatesÂ

Fencing coach sold property for a price well above its market value to a businessman whose son later won admission

Alongside concern about unconditional offers, Damian Hinds wants focus on improving access

Research shows larger intakes and alternative routes to higher education improves happiness among disadvantaged young people

Members of the public will be able to run their own experiments, producing data that could be valuable for scholars

Students in different cities simultaneously performing version of play interact at six separate points via technology

Karan Khemka weighs up the economic and moral returns on paying for a place at a top-ranked institutionÂ

‘Cloud cuckoo land’ to think British-based academics will be partners of choice after exit from European Union, conference hears

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Despite its tarnished reputation and history of collapsed ventures, the for-profit sector retains a strong foothold on the US academy. Paul Basken tracks its successes and failures

The author of ‘Erased: The Untold Story of the Panama Canal’ on pirates, Western civilisation and tropical stereotypes

Peer review promised by India-based publisher often turned out to be cursory or non-existent, says Federal Trade Commission