THE Scholarly Web
Weekly transmissions from the blogosphere

Weekly transmissions from the blogosphere
Undergraduate tuition feesThrice the price, but with field tripsUniversities are increasingly paying for student field trips following the trebling of the cap on tuition fees this academic year, a...
University of East AngliaTempest testamentSmall, intense polar storms could make a big difference to climate predictions, according to a study. Researchers from the University of East Anglia and the...
United StatesBrains trustA businessman has pledged $200 million (£123 million) to a US university to establish an institute for neuroscience research. Mortimer Zuckerman, chairman and co-founder of...
A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Yes, that's right. In an exciting new venture, we are devoting this edition of The Poppletonian to New Year messages from some of those loyal servants of the university who labour away without the...

Universities need to hire the best people for the job, but demanding PhDs from all is not the way to do it

Third of sector expects staff to hold qualification, FoI request shows. Elizabeth Gibney reports
The Quality Assurance Agency will be bailed out by the taxpayer if it is sued by a private college that fails an inspection, it has emerged.
‘Probably the most significant medieval historian’ rounds on absentee students. Paul Jump writes
Unions protest over transfer of academic support services to external firm. Jack Grove reports
The UK higher education sector has concluded that an insurance scheme to guarantee international students a fees refund or alternative places should their course or university close down is “...
University efforts to make it easier to remove fixed-term staff anger unions. Jack Grove writes
Selective universities could be granted extra student numbers to allow them to admit disadvantaged applicants with potential but without the highest grades.
A sociology lecturer at the University of Birmingham is at the centre of a redundancy row that could lead to industrial action among the institution’s 1,000 University and College Union members.