<榴莲视频 class="pane-title">
Articles by John Gill 榴莲视频>
The UK’s highly internationalised university system – a major factor in its research success – is a treasure that must be saved from a political altar
University managers can learn from Geraint Thomas’ example that success can be won without having to be domineering and overbearing
If students aren’t charged fees, who gets stuck with the bill, and can they keep paying enough to keep the quality of the offering from suffering?
In furthering technological leaps, how close should institutions be to Silicon Valley and how can they ensure that everyone, not just business, benefits?
For all the good ascribed to Twitter and the rest, is this time-consuming activity improving things or distracting us from achieving transformative impact?
There is no holding back the king tide that is the Asian country’s higher education ambition – yet while the torrent carries some riches, what will it sweep away?
Invisible hands are pumping up an era of inflation inflation. Is it possible to discern what’s behind the alleged crisis of ever more top marks?
Scholars keep feelings of inferiority well cloaked yet self-doubt can strike any of us and only disclosure alleviates the pain of this hidden epidemic
Mismatch between the TEF and the Student Engagement Survey hints at whether a marketised system offers students good options or just branding bling
As universities mull their partnerships with outsiders, all eyes study their power within national economic hierarchies
Politicians and social media warriors could learn a lesson from the ‘ivory towers’ they are so quick to deride: plurality and exchange of ideas are good things
While it is important to reassess behaviour and power dynamics through a post-Weinstein lens, it is harder to make the case for deleting work from the academic record
That the role of higher education is so often misunderstood or misportrayed, even in institutions, means much good work goes unremarked
Higher education institutions are vital not just to research and economic growth but also to ensuring the health of liberal democracy on the continent
The tabloid campaign to save the Open University has forced ministers to review a crisis precipitated by their party’s higher education policy, writes John Gill
Universities need to raise funds from potentially mercurial financial markets without losing sight of their long-term missions. It’s a delicate balance
Academics see the OfS, like the changes in USS pensions, as another attack on them and the cherished compensations of their profession
There must be greater permeability between universities and tech giants if we want to protect data from corporate interests and use it for the public good
In view of recent revelations of abuse in several industries, networks such as an academic sisterhood could offer vital support and solidarity
Universities need to confront, rather than ignore, uncomfortable questions about the worth of higher education to be in with a fighting chance
Market forces unleashed on the UK university sector have pushed up senior pay, fuelled the rows over it and posed questions about ‘value for money’ that are shaping the future of universities
Universities’ demands are taking too great a toll on individuals’ health and happiness, as our first work-life balance survey shows
The plans for SUSTech capture the boldness of the country’s ambitions to create in years universities that can match century-old powers
Knowledge exchange sits low on academia’s menu, overshadowed by meatier mains, but could the assessment of universities’ third-stream activities tempt some to make it a signature dish?