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Articles by John Morgan 榴莲视频>
Labour's shadow higher education minister has said she is open to "a diversity of provision and providers" in the sector.
A Labour backbencher has called on the party to adopt a graduate tax as its official policy for higher education funding, highlighting support from the party's most senior figures.
Labour could lower tuition fees below the party's current proposals for a ?6,000 threshold if it takes power in the next general election, shadow higher education minister Shabana Mahmood has indicated.
Former Cambridge bursar leads long journey to recovery. John Morgan reports from Brighton
Is the new student loans system an affordable, progressive system of graduate contributions - or a dodgy move to get debt off the books that could bring grave fiscal consequences? John Morgan sifts through the rhetoric, rates and RABs
A High Court ruling means London Metropolitan University's overseas students will be allowed to continue with their studies, while the university has been granted permission to apply for judicial review against the UK Border Agency's decision to revoke its visa licence.
UUK vice-president Sir Christopher Snowden tells John Morgan of his concerns over 'government rhetoric'
But could admissions instability lead to further numbers deregulation? John Morgan reports
The government has moved towards granting for-profit higher education firms VAT advantages to put them on "the same footing" as universities - although some firms have already gained that advantage by switching to non-profit status.
Two potential destination colleges named in recent watchdog reports. John Morgan writes
The number of mainstream students set to start higher education courses in England this year is down 62,000, or 17 per cent, on last year's figures, analysis by Times Higher Education suggests.
Three of the 15 institutions initially chosen as potential destinations for London Metropolitan University's overseas students are commercial operators, it has emerged, after a ?2 million fund was announced by the government to help students transfer.
‘Most advanced’ student-support structure in developed world, says OECD. John Morgan reports
A committee of MPs has called on the government to exclude overseas students from figures on net migration, warning that current policy risks "undermining a world class export market".
Rise in number of university offshoots raises questions about oversight and status. John Morgan reports
Les Ebdon discusses context, excellence and life-transforming opportunities with John Morgan
London Metropolitan University is to take legal action to challenge the revocation of its licence to admit international students, saying it has a duty to the higher education sector to challenge the UK Border Agency's decision.
A US Senate report damned the for-profit sector. John Morgan asks if it has lessons for the UK
Some universities remain up to 600 students short of the number they need to recruit, amid suggestions that other institutions could be causing the shortfalls by "hanging on to" applicants who missed their grades.
University Alliance's new leader talks funding policy and standing firm. John Morgan reports
The higher education sector's second biggest union is to ballot for strike action over the 1 per cent pay offer from universities.
Universities are facing a “student recruitment crisis” in clearing and some are 2,000 short of their number targets, according to a marketing consultancy.
Universities and students have been experiencing "massive" ongoing problems with the admissions agency's online system during clearing, according to a vice-chancellor, who warned that institutions could be more likely to face fines for over-recruitment as a result.