Amity plans US campus for 10,000 ‘primarily’ American students Indian private university adds Long Island to list of global campuses, but faces opposition on Boston plans By John Morgan 25 October
We cannot ignore the impact that financial stress is having on students Rosi Prescott considers how universities should tackle the decline in students’ well-being often caused by financial stress By Rosi Prescott 23 October
Tufts president: ‘call people out’ over offensive comments Anthony Monaco adds that the US has a more ‘holistic approach’ to recruiting students than the UK By Ellie Bothwell 23 October
On this course, there are no grades, no syllabuses and no measures of success A teaching collaboration between two very different institutions worked better than either could have hoped, write John Simon and Thomas Schutte By John Simon 21 October
Universities must offer ‘joined-up’ response on harassment and abuse UUK report brings together best practice for combating abusive behaviour By Matthew Reisz 21 October
US universities mull ditching criminal conviction question Advocates for using education to help former inmates get their lives back on track say that current policies are deterring applications By Jon Marcus 20 October
The week in higher education – 20 October 2016 The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media By THE reporters 20 October
Ethnic minorities more likely to regret going to university Many graduates would also have chosen a different subject or institution in hindsight, study reveals By Chris Havergal 20 October
Larger bursaries ‘boost students’ chances of getting good degree’ Study of 36,000 undergraduates identifies positive relationship between financial aid, retention and attainment By Chris Havergal 18 October
Universities need to stop treating their students like children Students are too often micromanaged and policed while on campus, and it needs to stop, writes Frank Furedi By Frank Furedi 14 October
UK to promote universities abroad despite pledging visa crackdown Government spends ?4m advertising to overseas students at the same time as visa action pledged on ‘lower-quality’ courses By John Morgan 14 October
Brazil ‘needs more flexible courses’ to overcome dropout rate The South American country is failing to retain enough of its students, a government survey has found By Matthew Reisz 13 October
Solid states: in praise of public universities Even the best rankings cannot fully convey the valuable mission of America’s Land-Grant universities, says Stephen Joel Trachtenberg By Stephen Joel Trachtenberg 13 October
Wall Street Journal/Times Higher Education College Rankings 2017 When it comes to student engagement, US institutions in the research elite typically have a lot of ground to make up By Ellie Bothwell 12 October
South Africa battles to salvage academic year as protests go on Vice-chancellor warns of ‘lost generation’ if classes do not resume soon By Chris Havergal 11 October
England guarantees funding for EU students starting courses next year Current funding and fee levels apply for duration of 2017-18 courses even if UK leaves EU By John Morgan 11 October
Universities ‘should help with overseas students’ living costs' Report also suggests that institutions develop 'more sophisticated' financial arrangements By Ellie Bothwell 10 October
Clown hysteria on US campuses prompts debate on safety Campus police left in position of trying to reassure students while not adding to febrile atmosphere By Jake New for Inside Higher Ed 10 October
It’s not enough to write what you know As the US’ ‘dumpster fire’ of a presidential election looms, it is more important than ever that students engage with other perspectives and acknowledge that their views aren’t universal, says Maximillian Alvarez By Maximillian Alvarez 6 October
Going back to school – for good Universities in Pakistan and across the developing world should help spread the light of learning, say Abdur Rehman Cheema and Mehvish Riaz By Abdur Rehman Cheema 6 October
Can student feedback become a two-way street? We need a cultural shift in how we provide comments on student work, say Naomi Winstone and Robert Nash By Naomi Winstone 6 October
Will Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour opt for free education or graduate tax? Corbyn-sceptic calls free education ‘enormously expensive’, but backers see it as clear and popular By John Morgan 5 October
UK government to toughen student visa rules for 'low quality' courses 榴莲视频 secretary says government will support 'best' universities By John Morgan 4 October
Join the International Day of Action Against Contract Cheating Universities should be doing more to speak up and out against contract cheating, says Tricia Bertram Gallant By Tricia Bertram Gallant 3 October
Trump attacks colleges on endowments, calls for more student aid But has Hillary Clinton left Republican candidate in shade on college affordability? By John Morgan 3 October
Time to ditch the DLHE? Degrees are about aspirations as much as they are about status and salaries, write Neil Sammells and Rob Mears By Neil Sammells 2 October
New website aims to help people think like economists A network of students and academics aims to promote public economic literacy as well as reform the curriculum By Matthew Reisz 1 October
The week in higher education – 29 September 2016 The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media By THE reporters 29 September
Academic double standards: freedom for lecturers, compliance for students Bruce Macfarlane on the hypocrisy of academics who help to monitor students in ways they themselves never were By Bruce Macfarlane 29 September
How universities can help to support student-parents The challenges of being a parent while studying must not be overlooked, says Helen Owton By Helen Owton 28 September
World Academic Summit 2016: Private universities should ‘double’ low-income students Association of American Universities president also says state of US public universities is like battle to save species from extinction By Ellie Bothwell 28 September
Claims of US student loan crisis are ‘fictional narrative’ But a federal income-contingent system is called for in a book co-authored by Brookings Institution fellow By John Morgan 28 September
World Academic Summit 2016: Clinton free college plan 'won't happen', says Berkeley chancellor Nicholas Dirks tells THE summit that free tuition would enable government to 'control' public research universities By Ellie Bothwell 27 September
Survey reveals sexual harassment on Chinese campuses Results come as issue continues to be high up agenda on campuses in the UK and US By David Matthews 27 September
UK government 'must abandon new HE laws, focus on Brexit threat' Opposition spokesman on higher education also says government tactics on EU students are 'grubby' By John Morgan 27 September
Malaysian MP flags student funding problems Loan pot cut by two thirds, claims Rafizi Ramli of People’s Justice Party By Holly Else 27 September
New academic year in US sees number of racist incidents Flurry prompts discussion over whether such incidents are more common, or a symptom of social media explosion By Scott Jaschik for Inside Higher Ed 26 September
OECD: Germany’s publicly funded, no-fees system ‘unsustainable’ But others say shifting the problem back to students would simply be the ‘easy way out’ instead of prioritising HE in state budgets By John Morgan 26 September
Australian HE fights ‘sub-standard’ student admission claims Government review of admissions followed media assertions that misleading entry tariffs are ‘rife’ By John Morgan 26 September
University applicants: facilities ‘more important’ than reputation Annual study from UK estates group shows academic performance has dropped in importance for prospective students By John Elmes 25 September
Engineering graduate numbers ‘triple in Mexico’ Royal Academy of Engineering report reveals which countries are proving most effective in training up engineers to drive economic growth By Matthew Reisz 23 September
UK university counselling teams ‘chronically understaffed’ Hepi report says some universities should increase their funding for mental health services at least threefold By Chris Havergal 22 September
Liberal arts colleges 'best for teaching satisfaction' Small colleges perform well in Times Higher Education US student survey, which will fuel upcoming university ranking for the country By Ellie Bothwell 22 September
The week in higher education – 22 September 2016 The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media By THE reporters 22 September
World insight: preparing asylum seekers in Hong Kong for higher education Anna Esaki-Smith writes on the many challenges facing her as she prepares her class for the IELTS exam By Anna Esaki-Smith 21 September
Australia: ‘many sex assaults' on overseas and LGBT students President of the Australian Human Rights Commission says number of attacks on campus is 'seriously under-reported' By Ellie Bothwell 20 September
Mainland Chinese students ‘face discrimination in Hong Kong’ Students report hostility from traders and clashes over whether Hong Kong is part of China in new study By David Matthews 20 September
Chicago academics hit back on safe spaces Letter from dozens of faculty members follows dean of students' warning that institution did not support suppression of controversial views By Scott Jaschik for Inside Higher Ed 19 September
Male students most hurt by 'sophomore slump' Large-scale quantitative analysis of university grades confirms the existence of slump in second-year marks first observed in the 1950s By Jack Grove 19 September
Simon Newell, 1956-2016 Neonatal consultant was an ‘inspirational and gifted teacher’ at the University of Leeds By Jack Grove 15 September
Students ‘driven to social media in class by Fomo’ Unhappiness at university and ‘fear of missing out’ could be driving distraction during lectures, study suggests By David Matthews 15 September
Peter Mandelson: Brexit an ‘act of self-harm’ that ‘breaks my heart’ Cuts to public teaching funding may have ‘gone too far’, MMU chancellor and creator of Browne review also tells THE By John Morgan 15 September
University of Essex improves conditions for postgraduates who teach Graduate teachers will be placed on the university’s pay scale and receive the same employment benefits as other staff By Ellie Bothwell 15 September
The week in higher education – 15 September 2016 The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media By THE reporters 15 September
Could refusal to reveal graduate premium lead to a fraud charge? David Palfreyman considers how secretiveness about the benefits a graduate might expect might fall foul of trading regulations By David Palfreyman 15 September
OECD: countries’ fees must not ‘skyrocket’ past ‘price limit’ Education at a Glance report brings warning from director for education, who also says US private fees bear ‘no relationship’ to quality By John Morgan 15 September
EAIE conference 2016: more money needed on student mental health Event debates how counselling teams can cope with increasing mental health problems among learners By Chris Havergal 15 September
International students save up to one-fifth after Brexit But UK students at universities abroad will lose out from the falling pound By Ellie Bothwell 15 September
EAIE conference 2016: Canada’s global engagement challenge Karen McBride explains why encouraging students to study abroad is of such importance to Canada’s universities By Karen McBride 14 September