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Articles by John Gill 榴莲视频>
Artistic practice may count as research within the academy but it must be treated carefully if innovation is not to be stifled
Bad apples who cheat may at times beat the system, but their misdeeds should not taint the honest and ethical majority
David Cameron can court India’s students all he likes, but the UK’s immigration policy is hardly bowling them over
On open access as in other areas of reform, the coalition has failed to heed the maxim that slow and steady wins the race
Advertising and branding matter more than ever, but universities already have what every business wants
In a revolutionary era the sector must abandon its traditional reticence to explore a taboo research subject: itself
A variety of institutions are feeling exposed in the shifting landscape emerging from the blizzard of coalition changes
Data on the number of eligible staff submitted to the REF will produce better rankings - but funding councils must play ball
Funding system must ensure it does not hamper institutions’ ability to offer work placements crucial to graduate employment
Universities need to hire the best people for the job, but demanding PhDs from all is not the way to do it
The bells may be ringing out for Christmas Day, but for the sector they signal alarm after a year of unprecedented upheaval
Moocs promise to strike at the heart of traditional higher education delivery, but it needn’t mean the chop for universities
Rather than assuming bigger is better, we must trial research laboratory effectiveness before concluding which size is just right
New-found restraint over research council applications should be praised but will it survive further funding cuts?
The Council for the Defence of British Universities aims to repel the market forces that it says threaten the academy's values
In the high fees era, debates about teaching qualifications will be just as pointed in the lecture hall as in the classroom
With so little hard data about, the decision on taking more places out of the numbers cap is tough. It might all come down to cost
With the first cohort of ?9K students settling in, there is still no clear idea about how cost is affecting numbers and teaching
The focus on world-leading work could turn a generation of unsubmitted researchers into second-class citizens
Budget forecasts suggest that higher education is still at risk from a government needing to find further savings
With student admissions down 54,000 on last year, even elite institutions are facing severe financial hardship
It is outrageous that Whitehall remains reliant on an inaccurate system to measure overseas students' comings and goings
Fear of losing students to the for-profit sector is driving some institutions to try beating private providers at their own game
Sunlight is the best disinfectant, and the UK's institutions and researchers must be fearless in shining a light on misconduct