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Articles by Jack Grove ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ>
Plans by the University of London to sell a rare set of early printed editions of Shakespeare¡¯s plays have been branded ¡°egregiously wrong¡±.
Dip into surplus to improve below-inflation 1% offer, union tells sector
Academics fear thin end of wedge
High fees prove no object to demand, but student standards may invite scrutiny
Critics say universities are ¡®not playing fair¡¯
Global project explores the paucity of female leaders in academia
Undergraduates ¡®reproduce social inequality¡¯, paper argues
More divorced mothers are seeking legal advice about whether ex-husbands can extend support payments for children at university, a law firm has said.
UEL body plans research into attainment and staffing gap
Will Michael Gove¡¯s reform plans endanger the traditional values he seeks to promote? Jack Grove investigates
Institutions consider a ¡®range of strategies¡¯ to win favourable scores from students
Students who apply to university after receiving their A-level results are almost twice as likely to be dissatisfied with their course, a survey says.
Undergraduates at the University of Bath are the most satisfied students in the UK, according to the latest National Student Survey.
The private, not-for-profit ifs School of Finance has been granted university college status by the government.
Many private colleges are failing to take action to catch cheating by students, according to a Quality Assurance Agency review.
Academics at leading South Korean universities are the world¡¯s best at attracting funding from business, a new study says.
Overseas universities are hoping to snap up UK students left without a university place on A-level results day.
¡°Eugenics was created by Charles Darwin¡¯s cousin Gollum,¡± according to a student gaffe that formed a late entry in our annual exam howlers competition
Students¡¯ unions from across London have created a new body that could replace the University of London Union (ULU), aiming to stop the university from taking over union buildings.
Online comments show no room for complacency
Observers predict admissions turmoil as Russell Group members join clearing
Children from the poorest families remain around half as likely to enter higher education than their more affluent peers, new figures show.
A legal challenge has been launched over law changes that unions claim make it easier to remove staff on fixed-term contracts.
The former deputy head of the Higher Education Academy has taken over at the helm of the organisation.