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Articles by Juliette Rowsell 榴莲视频>
Sector leaders fear ‘catastrophic’ damage to scholarship as overseas academics and students leave
Some student midwives are working a 70-hour week as they balance demanding courses alongside part-time work
Lack of funding hampering efforts to develop research workforce, study says
Great British Bake Off finalist and researcher at the University of Leicester discusses the importance of community outreach, and what academia can learn from baking
Goldsmiths and Chichester cases could be start of rising tide of court challenges from aggrieved students, lawyers say
Google, LinkedIn and X warned that adverts for contract cheating services have ‘proliferated’ despite legislative bans
Embedding digital competency into hiring and advancement decisions would help to foster innovation, report says
Survey respondents warn of misuse of process, inadequate consultations and impact on staff left behind
Wealthiest halls able to offer allowances worth more than twice as much as those at less moneyed outposts
Institutions need to communicate recognition of prior learning policies more clearly if lifelong education reforms are to bear fruit, says QAA
Disruption on campuses as large protests put pressure on Netanyahu’s government after six hostages found dead
Scheme that places researchers at heart of policymaking set to be expanded, but can evidence-based advice really make a difference in heat of politics?
Universities must rethink how they engage with students in era of major upheavals, according to Bonni Stachowiak as she reflects on 10 years of running Teaching in Higher Ed
University accused of breaching contracts as redundancies of specialist staff restrict student choice
Government should look to foster culture of collaboration after era of competition, says Hepi paper
Scholars from across the political divide see reduced engagement with their research when they are more outspoken, report finds
Research indicates that dozens of institutions have held lowest-level award for more than a decade and ‘are content not to do more’
Row over payment of foreign lecturers has stretched on for three decades
Record number of students win places having applied after main sector deadlines
Unique course denied reprieve as staff say loss of 62 colleagues means averting further cuts is ‘no victory’
Rise in students going directly into clearing helps keep overall admissions numbers steady
Even if academics are empowered to switch off from their jobs, feasibility of planned rules in question if root causes of overwork are not addressed
University cuts savings target after 62 take enhanced severance pay
Covid-era expansion showed highly selective universities that they could manage growth, says admissions head