Digital Dieting: From Information Obesity to Intellectual Fitness, by Tara Brabazon
Sandra Leaton Gray on healthier options for e-junkies

Sandra Leaton Gray on healthier options for e-junkies

Faculty-in-residence keen to offer advice and a listening ear

A new generation of ‘dual-intensive’ universities can do the job, argues Edward Acton

Steve West warns that vice-chancellors’ duty to engage in debate is not straightforward

Plans to overhaul A-levels will have “tragic consequences” on fair access efforts, the University of Oxford’s admissions head has said.

Seventy-five institutions have been awarded funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council’s new PhD funding scheme.

University staff will hold a one-day strike on 31 October in a row over pay

The dramatic decline in part-time students will continue this year, according to a report that calls for an “urgent push” to promote such study.

The UK is the “biggest biosciences cluster in Europe” a report by the BioIndustry Association has said.

Impact should be given a weighting of 25 per cent at the next research excellence framework, the author of a government-commissioned review has said

By Scott Jaschik, for Inside Higher Ed

The UK has overtaken Japan to become China’s second most prolific research collaborator.

Scientists need to lose their “excessive fastidiousness” to make London the scientific capital of the world, the city’s mayor Boris Johnson has said.

Download the podcastOur seventh books podcast features Graham Farmelo, author of Churchill’s Bomb: A Hidden History of Science, this week’s Times Higher Education book of the week.The award-winning...

Download the podcastFrom October 8-11 2013, Canberra hosted the annual Australian International Education Conference, the largest international education conference in the Asia-Pacific region. The...