Letter: Economic follies (2)
If it means recruiting the brightest 50 per cent of "poor kids" to join the brightest 50 per cent of "rich kids" at university, then Estelle Morris is right that expansion should not threaten...
If it means recruiting the brightest 50 per cent of "poor kids" to join the brightest 50 per cent of "rich kids" at university, then Estelle Morris is right that expansion should not threaten...
Auriol Stevens's assessment of higher education and the supposed gains made over the past 30 years ("A challenge for the next 30 yearsI", THES, October 19) was insulting. It trades on the view that...
How many more times will we hear John Randall's outrageous, endlessly repeated insinuation that British universities are somehow analogous to Railtrack? His former organisation regularly showed that...
Simon Jenkins is wrong to say that the research assessment exercise was crass beyond belief. He is conjuring a straw man because RAE panels assess much more evidence than quantified indices of...
Despite reports ("Race is on for AUT's top job", THES, October 19), I am not a potential candidate for general secretary of the Association of University Teachers. Incidentally, if I had been, I...
In response to events of September 11, a small group of us at the University of Southampton organised a "teach-in" for the first day of term. The response from students, staff and the local community...
Education secretary Estelle Morris this week gave welcome attention to higher education in two speeches: a general one on Monday setting out the challenge as she sees it - wider participation, world-...
Lisa Jardine chairs a discussion between Fay Weldon and Elaine Showalter on the women's movement - past, present and future. Karen Gold listens in Lisa Jardine: Can you remember, Fay, when you...
Gender barriers are denying many women promotion in academia. Helen Hague asks what is being done? It is really quite touching. A 56-year-old male professor is exasperated by atalented female staff...

Why did T. S. Eliot have wife Vivienne committed? She was definitely not mad, argues Carole Seymour-Jones On her death in January 1947, Vivienne Eliot left her papers to the Bodleian Library, Oxford...
Muslim academic Zaki Badawi hopes that the events of September 11 will encourage the US to address the issues that inspired such atrocities. Anne Sebba reports. America must see that to stop the war...
Blaze at Glasgow University investigated An investigation is under way today into yesterday’s fire at Glasgow University, which destroyed the institution’s 100-year-old botany building. The...
Nigerian students involved in bloody protests Students at Nigeria’s Federal University of Agriculture in Makurdi protested against apparent military action that killed 200 villagers...
Cheap student loans must go, says Treasury Cheap loans for students would be scrapped and limited grants introduced under a package of reforms of student finance being backed by Downing Street and...
US fees outstrip inflation For the first time since 1996, tuition fees at public universities in the United States have increased by more than those in the private sector and by nearly three times...