Paul Basken joined Times Higher Education as North America editor in September 2018. He was previously a government policy and science reporter with The Chronicle of Higher Education, where he won an annual National Press Club award for exclusives. He founded the State Department bureau at Bloomberg News, was a White House and international correspondent with United Press International, and serves on the editorial advisory board of ASEE’s Prism magazine.
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McGraw-Hill and Cengage abandon union after government demands heavy culling
With presidential elections looming, institutions are finding success from incorporating voter aid into campus operations
After sex crime conviction, elite university gave financier-donor his own office
Stanford doctor warns extreme partisanship may taint future research
Lawyers hired by students reject institutional pleas of financial duress
Publisher coalition also embracing assessments through preprint formats
Lawyer warns over alleged meeting between institutions on foreign students
SNHU bets crisis will push student demand for no-frills model
Partnership approach during pandemic raises hopes of bursting scientific silos
President, lawmakers allocate money then accuse Harvard and others of taking it
After rejection of virtual peer review, federal agency halts new awards, prompting concerns for younger researchers
Inequities understood at undergraduate levels seen lacking in graduate admissions
US university eyes overhauled residential experience for the autumn, possible wait until 2021
Maker concedes that SAT, already controversial, could grow even more inequitable
Institutions face both praise and criticism while seeking a proper balance, with the University of Chicago contributing a multimillion-dollar package that includes free meals and cash grants
Rebuffed on pricing and open access, universities refuse full-access renewals
Continuing remote teaching in the autumn will be unsustainable for some institutions, warns leader of online college
Reliance on formulas and philosophies giving way to complexity and case studies
Pandemic-driven grading shifts illuminate long-accepted inequities
Coronavirus crisis may make institutions more eager to please to students, but ‘tensions’ already in evidence
Alarmed by losses, main institutional group eases previous opposition to reopening
Democratic frontrunner raises fear among private colleges after taking on Bernie Sanders’ plan
The namesake cities in the US and UK are both home to internationally renowned universities whose industry collaborations are proving highly successful. But while that is good news for national economies, where does it leave the locals priced out of their own neighbourhoods? Paul Basken and John Morgan report
Research losses could be small but wider national epidemic control measures may prove a ‘once-in-a-century evidence fiasco’, according to experts