<榴莲视频 class="pane-title">
Articles by John Morgan 榴莲视频>
The government appears to be preparing for a battle between selective universities and Les Ebdon, the new director of fair access, by giving him stronger legal backing in case he rejects, changes or enforces universities' access agreements.
An institution receiving "significant" bad press or a petition signed by around a third of its student body should be visited by quality inspectors, the University Alliance mission group has suggested.
Education giant determined to establish its name 'much more strongly' in sector, John Morgan hears
EU students' arrears figure provokes Tory ire as fears grow over repayment plans. John Morgan reports
Five Midlands universities have come together to form a regional bloc of institutions aimed at maximising research income.
'Transparency needed' over Hefce's ?7m bonus payment to elite universities, reports John Morgan
Regent's College has become the latest private institution to be granted degree-awarding powers, and it now aims to become only the second private university in the UK.
John Morgan assesses the impact of policy changes on mission group dynamics
Post-92s among high risers as coalition hopes for 'competitive pressure' fade. John Morgan reports
All eyes on De Montfort's move to seek ?110m in 'prudent' long-term financing. John Morgan writes
Body aims to lose 'unhelpful' name and recruit new members abroad. John Morgan reports
De Montfort University has confirmed that it has secured funding from private investors via a ?110 million public bond, with other universities expected to follow it into the bond markets.
THE survey finds post-92s among those with eyes on the ceiling. John Morgan and Nick Mithen write
De Montfort University is reportedly on the verge of issuing a ?120 million public bond, after ratings agency Moody's gave it a high credit rating based on a belief that the government would bail out any failing university.
Mentoring students in “emotional resilience” could improve graduate employability, according to Labour’s shadow higher education minister, who recalled her own challenges as the sole barrister in her chambers from an “immigrant, working-class” background.
Number of private courses eligible for public loans is increasing, BIS data show. John Morgan reports
Bigger fines for universities recruiting too many students could lead to financial instability and at least one university is likely to fail by 2015, sector experts have warned.
The universities and science minister has said that a higher education bill will be needed to allow "dissolution" for post-1992 universities and to give new powers to the Office for Fair Access.
The quality of teaching for student midwives is potentially threatened by worsening student-to-staff ratios at universities, according to the Royal College of Midwives.
The average starting salary in graduate-level jobs has increased by 6 per cent to ?26,500 a year, according to a survey by the Association of Graduate Recruiters.
Evidence has emerged that some higher education institutions may be falling markedly short on undergraduate recruitment for next year, with the University of Gloucestershire warning staff that it is 30 per cent below its target for 2012-13.
Elusive notion will mislead students and foul loan forecasts, experts hear. John Morgan writes
The universities and science minister has appealed to private investors to support overseas expansion for UK universities and stated that investment bank Goldman Sachs is “keen to investigate this possibility”.