Intakes squeezed to aid jobless medics
Germany plans to cut the number of medical students by 20 per cent in an attempt to tackle high unemployment among doctors and to improve the quality of medical training. Health Minister Horst...
Germany plans to cut the number of medical students by 20 per cent in an attempt to tackle high unemployment among doctors and to improve the quality of medical training. Health Minister Horst...
A PRESTIGIOUS grande ecole has been forced to close two of its centres in a French education ministry clampdown on abusive initiation rites. The director of the Arts et Metiers grande ecole closed...
The battle to head Rome's La Sapienza University, Europe's largest university, has ended with the defeat of Giorgio Tecce, 73, the autocratic and controversial rector who has ruled Europe's most...
The crush barriers and unfamiliar national flags have gone. Edinburgh's citizens can now reclaim their streets from the invasion of Commonwealth leaders and their entourages that they anticipated for...
I JOINED the Ambulance Service in the 1960s when treatment given by officers to patients was very mechanical and skills-based. In the 1980s paramedics were given increased responsibility, both to...
THESE are troubled times for UK higher education, though not on the scale suffered in Nigeria. The government's fees policy became further entangled this week with the decision to give Scottish and...
Graduates have always paid for their degrees - and for many of the subsidies enjoyed by the rest of the population. Timothy Curtin argues that the graduate tax scheme is a con THE Dearing report's...
If Cambridge is to keep its college fees it must admit more state school students, Anne Campbell argues MY FELLOW MP Phil Woolas argues that new Labour is not against excellence but adds that Labour...
Professional mathematicians, scientists and engineers have plenty of important issues to discuss with a government that might have been expected to bring fresh thinking to higher education and...
It is regrettable when politicians use superficial and populist rhetoric to advance views concerning serious public policy. On the subject of Oxbridge receiving Pounds 2,000 a head extra in funding,...
David Balding is wrong to suppose that Bayesian probability theory presents the only satisfactory method for reasoning about factual uncertainties in courts of law (THES, October 24). This is like...
The title of your diary column, Antithesis, could be taken as a licence to get the wrong end of the stick, but your diarist on October 24 clearly enjoyed the recent party at the Royal Institution so...
As Oxbridge marginally lowers the stakes in an attempt to deflect possible pruning of resources leading to diminution of the very fabric of the collegiate tutorial system, one solution might be to...
Alison Utley's report on the resistance of lecturers to "innovative" teaching methods (THES, October 24) suggests that the advocates of such methods see resistance as being a defence mechanism, as if...
Krishna Dutta's review of Anne Sebba's biography of Mother Teresa (THES October 17) was welcome. I was therefore disappointed at inconsistencies in her arguments. Dutta tells us that the Calcutta in...