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Articles by Patrick Jack ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ>
Departure of Tawana Kupe adds to turmoil at top level of South African sector
Academics question whether two new institutions are needed in a system already facing growing pains
When Rhodes and fees both fell and Africa¡¯s top university appointed its third black leader, hopes were raised that South African higher education was moving into a new era of equality. But several years on, funding pressures and governance failures still abound. Patrick Jack reports from Cape Town
UK government support for further rapid growth in international student numbers ¡®over for now¡¯, warns former minister
Supporters say new director will not be afraid to use new powers to ensure free speech duties are followed, but many still question the need for such a position
Minister announces new measures during Westminster Hall debate called in response to bereaved parents¡¯ petition
Hesa data may not tell full story, but UK universities should be concerned that students do not feel they are utilising what they learned, experts say
Low opinion of key exams connected to ¡®disastrous¡¯ decisions during Covid and a lack of understanding over how grades are awarded
Transdisciplinary solutions vital for humanity to overcome challenges it faces, according to founding dean of US¡¯ first climate school
Three Australian and four Canadian institutions among top 10 of THE ranking exploring progress of universities worldwide towards achieving SDGs
As Australia and Canada lead the overall table, THE data show universities worldwide grappling with the affordable housing crisis and demands to divest away from fossil fuels
Gaps between quality of providers¡¯ teaching and the students they cater for identified in new Hepi report
It means both the university¡¯s vice-chancellor and chair of council have stepped down inside just a few months
Academy ¡®at the heart¡¯ of humanity¡¯s failures to get to grips with scale of the issue, warns president of Arizona State University
Controversial move to stop students bringing family members puts UK behind its rivals in international recruitment, but spiralling migration could lead to even more measures further down the line
OfS figures show rise in number of scheduled events not taking place, but cancellations fall as proportion of all events
The latest figures show more visas were granted to Nigerian dependants than to main applicants
OfS sets sights on transnational education after finding students living overseas now account for 16 per cent of English registrations
The statistical literacy professor talks about her working-class upbringing and her passion for helping young people break barriers
International Higher Education Commission calls for shift in international student numbers towards full-time degrees
But young carers with degrees are more likely to be in work than carers without degrees, study finds
International students coming to UK will be prevented from bringing family members, unless on postgraduate research courses
Advancements in technologies can also present substantial opportunities for innovation in the sector, investors say
Universities could help alleviate any issues if they were told which of their students were bringing family members, leaders say