New partner for THE rankings; David Willetts joins TES Global advisory board
Change to data collection methods in move designed to permit deeper analysis as former universities minister agrees to chair new Higher Education Advisory Board

Change to data collection methods in move designed to permit deeper analysis as former universities minister agrees to chair new Higher Education Advisory Board

Online courses and international competition may well mean that only six or seven survive as world-class institutions, report claims

Closures, court orders, political intrigue: Paul Jump on a Spanish university’s bitter ongoing battle

Make your work accessible and communicate what academics can offer industry if you want to make connections. Plus the latest higher education appointments

CentreForum thinktank argues that rapid growth has been a ‘good thing’ and that private institutions have been subjected to unfair regulation

Research team hopes that predictions will help to clarify the value of metrics in assessment

Removing student number caps in ߣߣÊÓÆµ led to a marketing explosion and a sharp rise in public spending, English higher education has been warned.

A group of University of Birmingham students occupied one of its main buildings, calling for free education and the right to protest

A former Labour education secretary has warned his party not to reduce tuition fees to £6,000

The government is to unveil a range of courses allowing young people to complete a full honours degree while working, without having to pay fees

University College London and the Institute of Education have confirmed they will merge next week

Chinese-speaking students are to be placed with British companies to help them break into the Chinese market

Download the podcastJim Bock, vice-president and dean of admissions at Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania, talks to ߣߣÊÓÆµ reporter Chris Parr about the importance of the liberal arts,...

By Ry Rivard, for Inside Higher Ed

The government will have the power to order universities to ban ‘extremist’ speakers from their campuses, under a new bill