Funding fallout creates wide smiles and gnashing of teeth
To the RAE victors, the spoils, but institutions that saw their funding slashed last week in the allocations for 2009-10 are counting the costs. Times Higher Education staff report
To the RAE victors, the spoils, but institutions that saw their funding slashed last week in the allocations for 2009-10 are counting the costs. Times Higher Education staff report
UK university in talks as emirate looks to leapfrog established systems. John Gill reports from Doha
United StatesIt only takes a minuteA 60-second "microlecture" can work just as well as a longer class when paired with assignments and group discussion, a US college has claimed. San Juan College, a...
The AHRC wants help refining its proposals, but its integrated vision of research will not shift, Zoë Corbyn writesA new approach to the funding of arts and humanities research would effectively...
THE BRITISH ACADEMYThe British Academy has awarded 23 conference support grants, worth a total of almost £160,000, to UK scholars. The grants aim to promote dialogue and exchange within the...
The gentle touch is best when policing the masses, a UK academic has found. Melanie Newman reports
Bill George on data supplied by the Hubble Telescope and the implications for what may be found on extra-solar planets
The UK's elite universities help industry and wider society to prosper. They need to be funded appropriately, argues Roy Anderson
A historian has claimed that the Kremlin may be behind a decision by a Russian publishing house to ditch his latest book, about life under Joseph Stalin.The publisher, Atticus, insisted it made a...
Amount for elite staff cut by £6,000, Times Higher Education analysis shows. Zoë Corbyn reports
When a large number of departments in teaching-led universities were discovered by the 2008 research assessment exercise to be producing world-class work, a new phrase quickly entered the higher...
Hefce board member says science subjects were held to higher standards, writes Zoë Corbyn
QAA defends its reputation as select committee openly doubts its influence, writes Rebecca Attwood
Rose-tinted spectacles come off as MPs hear about plagues of plagiarism and faulty washing machinesChairman Phil Willis began the latest session of the Parliamentary inquiry into university standards...
Government's 50 per cent participation target criticised as 'simplistic'. Melanie Newman reports