Confucian, but not confused
Chinese-heritage students say stress or sloth, not cultural mores, spurs plagiarism. Jack Grove writes
Chinese-heritage students say stress or sloth, not cultural mores, spurs plagiarism. Jack Grove writes
University qualificationsSums rise in the EastBy 2020 more than four in 10 young graduates in countries that are members of either the G20 or the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development...
Education scholars told to swap 'minor' research for policy-focused pursuits. Matthew Reisz reports
But Quebec's government is determined not to be swayed by months of protests. Erin Millar reports

Poppleton's for-profit Elsie Dimchurch College of Drama and Deportment has been one of the "winners" in the recent review of private college courses undertaken by the Department for Business,...
Regarding "Grand fee paid for each foreign student" (News, 5 July). The article makes much of Newcastle University spending £2.2 million on recruitment agents' commission. What it does not mention is...
As academics, we are trained to understand complexity but too often argue in binary. The Dame Janet Finch-led Working Group on Expanding Access to Published Research Findings, of which I was a member...
We write to express our outrage at a recent decision by the University and College Union's national executive (on which we sit). Before the committee was a motion expressing regret about Labour Party...
Regarding "Failing the Turing test" (21 June): Fred Inglis' attack on the research excellence framework offers a sterile response to a dispiriting problem, and in doing so misses the point.Impact...
Regarding "After 'fightback', Classics will no longer be all Greek to urban youth" (News, 5 July). It reminded me of my continual irritation at the neglect of the singular nouns "phenomenon" and "...
One of the books recently reviewed in Times Higher Education, Modern Women in China and Japan (12 July), was advertised as having 224 pages and a price of £56.As a work of scholarship, the book may...
Charles Husband asks why so many academics are incapable of keeping to their allotted time at conferences ("Discourse and discourtesy", 12 July). What? Does he mean us? Then again, I note that...

New 'big physics' projects will need global funding and public support. Elizabeth Gibney writes
A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers
• When Karl Marx outlined his theory of class conflict, he missed one key contributing factor: the use of contextual data in university admissions. "Social engineering 'could lead to class war'",...