It has been a busy year for higher education, as our annual round-up of the top stories of 2017 reveals.
The past 12 months have seen universities front and centre of national and international news, with the scandal over vice-chancellor pay, the publication of the first teaching excellence framework results, and how the pressures of working in academia can affect scholars' mental health just three of the issues making headlines.?
The list below shows the 25 most popular articles on the Times Higher Education website this year. To be eligible, articles needed to have been published in 2017.
Articles about our World University Rankings are not included in this round-up. You can find our top 15 most popular rankings stories in a separate article.?
Without further ado, let the countdown begin...
<榴莲视频>25. How to be happy: academics advise on what brings joy at work榴莲视频>
An optimistic start to proceedings as seven scholars relate what work in their disciplines reveals about the search for HE happiness.
<榴莲视频>24. National Student Survey 2017: campuses omitted after NUS boycott?榴莲视频>
A high-profile boycott of the 2017 National Student Survey by the National Union of Students meant that several major higher education institutions, including the universities of Cambridge, Manchester, Oxford and Sheffield, failed to feature in this year’s table. The boycott was part of the union's protests over the introduction of the teaching excellence framework in England (more on that later in this list).
<榴莲视频>23. Which countries and universities are leading on AI research?榴莲视频>
China has been producing almost twice as many papers on artificial intelligence as the next highest-placed country in terms of publication volume for the field, our data analysis showed.
<榴莲视频>22. Teesside?University tells entire professoriate to reapply for their jobs榴莲视频>
In July, Teesside University told all of its research professors to reapply for their jobs, or face redundancy. The episode reportedly led to the departure of several leading research staff.
<榴莲视频>21. 榴莲视频 truths about the 榴莲视频 Office榴莲视频>
What should have been a straightforward application for leave to remain in the UK turned into a Kafkaesque nightmare for University of St Andrews’ lecturer Emily Michelson, whose research trip to Italy proved too much for visa administrators to handle.
<榴莲视频>20. The Higher Education pay survey 2017榴莲视频>
This year we split our long-running annual analysis of university pay levels into two articles, with vice-chancellors receiving their own article (keep scrolling if that's what you are looking for). The 2017 HE Pay survey, published in May, showed that academic pay is still falling in real terms and that equality is still an issue with regard to gender and ethnicity.
<榴莲视频>19.?Universities urged to tackle PhD mental health crisis榴莲视频>
In April, figures showed that more than half of PhD students experience symptoms of psychological distress and one in three is at risk of having or developing a psychiatric disorder.?Universities have been urged to do more to tackle a mental health crisis among postgraduates.
<榴莲视频>18. Using laptops in class harms academic performance, study warns?榴莲视频>
Using a laptop in class can significantly damage students’ academic performance, we reported in April this year. Researchers say students who use computers score half a grade lower than those who write notes.
<榴莲视频>17.?Dutch university says student cannot defend PhD dressed as pirate榴莲视频>
This article makes our most-read list despite only being published in late November. The headline says it all, really.?
<榴莲视频>16.?THE Teaching Survey 2017: results and analysis榴莲视频>
Teaching is a major source of satisfaction for university lecturers despite growing frustration with heavy administrative loads and badly prepared students who moan about their marks. These were just some of the conclusions of our in-depth analysis of the state of teaching in higher education, published in February.
<榴莲视频>15. The middle-class academic elite is totally out of touch榴莲视频>
Lisa Mckenzie has watched the academic world flail around at Brexit, Donald Trump and the Grenfell Tower fire, and she is not impressed.
<榴莲视频>14. Why the audit culture made me quit榴莲视频>
When Liz Morrish opened up to students about the pressures academics are under, disciplinary proceedings culminated in her resignation. She reflects on why she chose to tackle the failings of the neoliberal academy from the outside.
<榴莲视频>13.?Which universities could challenge the higher education elite?榴莲视频>
THE analysis reveals the 53 institutions that could surpass Oxbridge and the Ivy League
<榴莲视频>12. Poisonous science: dark side of the lab榴莲视频>
?The bullying and subsequent suicide of a talented Ivy League scientist exposes ugly truths about the cruelty and dysfunction at the heart of academic science
<榴莲视频>11. I quit! Why I am leaving UK academia榴莲视频>
How working 55 hours per week, the loss of research periods, slashed pensions, increased bureaucracy, tiny budgets and declining standards finally forced Michael Edwards out.
<榴莲视频>10. Of monsters and mentors: PhD disasters, and how to avoid them榴莲视频>
Despite all that’s been done to improve doctoral study, horror stories keep coming. In this June article, three students relate PhD nightmares while two academics advise on how to ensure a successful supervision
<榴莲视频>9.?THE Alma Mater Index 2017: who educates the global business elite?榴莲视频>
Our global survey gives a picture of which institutions are best at producing senior business leaders worldwide.
<榴莲视频>8. I’m glad I eschewed academia – there are other PhD options榴莲视频>
Nazima Kadir’s social circle reveals a range of alternative careers for would-be scholars, often with better rewards than academia.
<榴莲视频>7. The THE Vice-Chancellor Pay Survey榴莲视频>
In June, ahead of a summer of outcry over vice-chancellor pay levels, our annual survey revealed the state of play across the UK higher education sector. It continues to serve as the go-to resource for information on vice-chancellor remuneration.?
<榴莲视频>6. Young academics’ research ‘elegant but not interesting’榴莲视频>
Young researchers at Western universities are increasingly writing “safe” and “conservative” papers, according to a scholar who has described the “intense boredom” he feels when reading the titles of journal articles.
<榴莲视频>5. Publishers seek removal of millions of papers from ResearchGate榴莲视频>
In October, leading publishers stepped up their fight against ResearchGate by ordering the academic social network to take down papers that they say infringe copyright.
<榴莲视频>4. Universities need to plan for a dark future if academics prefer their own Plan B榴莲视频>
Conditions that undermine the notion of scholarly vocation – relentless work, ubiquitous bureaucracy – can cause academics acute distress and spur them to quit, wrote Ruth Barcan in June.?
<榴莲视频>3. Academics ‘face higher mental health risk’ than other professions榴莲视频>
Lack of job security, limited support from management and weight of work-related demands on time among risk factors putting academics' mental health at risk, we reported in August.
<榴莲视频>2. Why Germany educates international students for free榴莲视频>
As the country succeeds in attracting even more students from overseas, a mixture of demographics, "soft power" concerns and local politics help explain Germany's ostensibly generous tuition fee policy.
<榴莲视频>1. The teaching excellence framework (TEF) results榴莲视频>
During the year, our coverage of the TEF brought more than 270,000 different people to the THE websites. A number of TEF-themed articles would have made our top 25 on their own, but we have grouped them together for this list. The two most-read articles were the overall results, and our more detailed TEF metrics table.?
Chris Parr is digital and communities editor at Times Higher Education.?