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Articles by Chris Parr 榴莲视频>
Students have so many devices: sector must be smart and tap them, says expert. Chris Parr writes
Distil PhDs into 120 seconds: impossible? Not for the winners of a recent competition. Chris Parr reports
Witches, ducks, dead kings and dodos are among the reasons why people feel proud of their university, according to a Times Higher Education competition.
Student representatives and opposition MPs have rounded on Nick Clegg after the Liberal Democrat leader used a party political broadcast to apologise for breaking a pre-election pledge to oppose tuition fee rises.
Weekly transmissions from the blogosphere
The University of London has become the first higher education institution in England to offer courses via US-based online learning platform Coursera.
"Instead of adding to the overall footprint we are looking at the whole envelope of estate in terms of its conditionality."
The UK's first private dental school has been launched in conjunction with an independent university.
More than two-thirds of people want to limit the number of foreign students admitted to Britain, an opinion poll has revealed.
The maximum annual tuition fee for universities in Wales is to be frozen at ?9,000 for the next three years, the Welsh Government has announced.
Universities are under increasing pressure to offer incoming students access to state-of-the-art technology because of the increased fees they are being asked to pay, according to a report published this week.
University archaeologists searching for the resting place of Richard III are grabbing the news headlines after finding human remains.
A degree verification system has uncovered more than 130 bogus UK universities in just three months.
Higher education investment in the UK as a share of national wealth has increased, but remains lower than that of other developed nations, an annual study has found.
A vice-chancellor has accepted a most unlikely challenge in a bid to raise money for two local charities.
The new director of the Office for Fair Access, Les Ebdon, has been accused by an MP of "salivating" at the prospect of handing fines of up to ?500,000 to universities that miss targets for widening their student base.
They have never used an airline ticket, or had cause to consult a set of bound encyclopaedias, and regard point-and-shoot cameras as "soooooo last millennium".