Chinese students ‘turned off ߣߣÊÓÆµâ€™ by visa crackdown
Proposed visa caps, soaring rejection rates and ‘anti-China’ perceptions scaring off country’s most valuable student cohort

Proposed visa caps, soaring rejection rates and ‘anti-China’ perceptions scaring off country’s most valuable student cohort

Report says higher education institutions should do more to foster ‘lifelong active citizens’

‘It’s not a machine for cheating; it’s a machine for producing crap,’ says one professor infuriated by rise of bland scripts

Departments can no longer be singularly tied to their mathematical and engineering foundations, focused only on what can be built, says Beth Mynatt

Rate of women appearing on patent applications was as low as 17 per cent in Japan and South Africa, and just 20 per cent in Germany and Egypt

Quality regulation poses the biggest challenge as Bangladesh moves to expand PhD courses to private universities

List includes knighthoods for historian Niall Ferguson and climate scientist Jim Skea

The science is ‘just physics’ and the human chemistry matters more, says academic behind a sustainable development programme that’s going global

If rich countries poach your nurses you should ‘build more nursing schools’, conference hears

Actor Steve Coogan faces legal action over the portrayal of a university registrar in his 2022 film

Top US research funding agency, while unsure about proposed change to mission statement, swings back at partisan attempts to limit an equity-focused agenda

While centre-right majority may offer stability in Brussels, snap poll called by Emmanuel Macron offers fresh risk

Philadelphia city officials probe University of the Arts shutdown, in sign that policymakers might see the need to go beyond their habit of only protecting their publics

Academics attempt to move to public universities as private institutions hardest hit by declining enrolment

It is surely not Gradgrindian to ask whether a subject can do without a corpus of factual knowledge and still expect students to study it, says Colin Swatridge