University funding and finances
Nearly half of all university finance directors believe now is a good time to be taking āgreater riskā onto their balance sheets, according to a survey by consultants Deloitte.
Academics at leading South Korean universities are the worldās best at attracting funding from business, a new study says.
Glyndŵr University is to offer half-price postgraduate degree courses to British students in what it called an attempt to āstop knowledge and skills leaving home soilā.
Rick Rylance has been reappointed chief executive and deputy chair of the Arts and Humanities Research Council for a further four years.
Observers predict admissions turmoil as Russell Group members join clearing
Data on what each UK university will charge next year show how the cost of study can vary wildly
Lack of experience of large research budgets wonāt harm Hefce chief, say supporters
Research finds woe for squeezed middle, windfall for high-paid graduates
The number of students starting modern languages degrees fell by 12 per cent last year ā double the overall drop in student numbers, new figures show.
Savings are expected to surpass government goal
Low rents, cheaper fees and lack of construction ideal combination
Coventry Universityās Madeleine Atkins emerges triumphant from a āstrong fieldā of candidates
Sector may lose places after new inspection regime reports dip in standards
Warren Bebbington on a flexible response to the limits of growth
The Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine has been officially designated as a higher education institution.
More than 40 universities are to receive money in the latest round of a scheme to reduce energy costs and carbon emissions.
Interviews begin for chief executive post: will a woman get the nod at last?
Critics doubt legality of regulatory frameworkās disciplinary powers
Long-term study of alumni careers questions coalitionās STEM emphasis
Offa data another blow to ministerial claims of ācompetitive pressureā
Institutions must fulfil their historic mission of developing student potential, says former vice-chancellor
Smaller institutions unlikely to benefit from revised low-cost lending terms
Willetts aims to fill āblack holeā left by failure of higher education bill
The European Commission has announced plans to invest ā¬22 billion (Ā£19 billion) in public-private research and innovation projects over the next seven years.
The Ā£1.1 billion annual investment in science capital announced in last monthās spending round is the biggest āfor decadesā and must not be wasted.
More than 19,000 extra students have applied to university this year compared to 2012, new figures show.
The University of Manchester has become the latest university to launch a bond issue to raise money for capital investments.
Andy Westwood on the shift from āhumanā to āintellectualā capital
Offa chief: £150m committed by universities now part of access agreements
Council gives go-ahead to consider using bond to fill gap left by public funding cuts
The Cardiff governmentās policy of subsidising Welsh student fees when they study elsewhere in the UK has been attacked by the Welsh Conservatives, who say it is siphoning money to English universities.
The European Unionās next research and innovation funding programme, known as Horizon 2020, looks set to begin on schedule next year
Announcement comes as new details emerge about increased science capital budget
US-style charges await in unregulated system, education expert warns
Universities need clear protocols for accepting money - particularly from outside the UK, argues Chris Higgins
Protection for science and research spending will be maintained in 2015-16 while the capital budget will be increased to £1.1 billion, the chancellor George Osborne announced today.
Ratings agency Standard & Poorās has predicted that the new higher education funding regime will harm the creditworthiness of some UK universities, widening the gap between the āstrongest and weakestā.
The US has reclaimed its position as the biggest spender on higher education, as rising fees pushed it clear in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Developmentās annual figures.
The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills has reached a settlement with the Treasury in negotiations over the 2015-16 spending review, reports suggest
Sources say switch of medical education and research budgets to Department of Health increasingly unlikely
Martin McQuillan warns of a possible Manhattan Project for the sector
Universities deciding mechanisms to apportion RCUK cash
Cuts to widening participation funds anticipated to meet spending review targets
Vince Cable, the business secretary, says he has āruled out categoricallyā any rise in interest rates for graduates who took out student loans before 2012, while stressing that plans for a sale of student loans are ongoing
The government should urgently clarify its plans for the sale of the student loan book and reassure existing graduates that their repayments will not be raised, according to Labourās shadow higher education minister.
Just four European countries spend less as a proportion of national income
IPPR report offers stark warning over £6,000 plans
Ministers should extend student loans to many more part-time students to remedy a ācrisisā in recruitment, a thinktank commission is set to recommend
Parallel sectors would overcome problems of āone-size-fits-allā funding, group argues
Despite loss of teaching grant, universities must still comply with enrolment targets
Minister and BIS take close interest in study with enormous policy implications
Groups of universities could raise funding for postgraduate student loans by issuing bonds, a report by the thinktank CentreForum has suggested.
Moving medical education and research funding to the Department of Health would āpose a significant threat to the UKās leading positionā in the fields, medical schools have warned George Osborne.
Russell Groupās latest members have agreed to stump up Ā£500,000 each
Stay-at-home students who attend a local university should be eligible for cut-price tuition fees of £5,000 a year, according to an influential commission of higher education experts
Lowering tuition fees to Ā£6,000 ā a policy put forward by Labour - could cost the Treasury the same as the current Ā£9,000 set-up, a study has claimed.
Full disclosure could break competition law, conference hears
Institutions consider projects to take advantage of VAT exemption
Ā£9,000 limit poses threat to quality and income, conference hears
Treatment to avoid cuts would do more harm than good, critics say