A ¡®jobbified¡¯ university teaching ¡®transferable skills¡¯ and marketable degrees neglects so much that is crucial to vocational formation, says Chris Higgins
It is surely not Gradgrindian to ask whether a subject can do without a corpus of factual knowledge and still expect students to study it, says Colin Swatridge
Anglophone scepticism about the value of language study had been rising for many years before anyone had heard of Duolingo or ChatGPT. But while some academics believe technology will kill off universities¡¯ remaining language departments, others dare to hope it will be their saviour. Patrick Jack reports
The humanities- and social sciences-focused institution is the canary in UK higher education¡¯s increasingly explosive coalmine, says Sir Keith Burnett
University says it intends to phase out teaching in areas also including art history and journalism, as UWE becomes latest institution to announce job cuts
Our department obliges Jewish studies students to study Islamic civilisation and vice versa. But will extremism put off applicants, asks Jonathan Judaken
Attacks by the likes of Donald Trump and Narendra Modi on how the humanities are taught speak to the enduring political power of these subjects despite their precarity within the academy, says Saikat Majumdar
¡®The change¡¯ is finally starting to get the attention it deserves, but the issues go far beyond the medical field, say Joanne Ella Parsons and Ruth Heholt