The games kids play...
If home biotechnology becomes the latest fad, we'd best start laying down rules, says Freeman Dyson Fifty years ago at Princeton, I watched the mathematician John von Neumann design and build the...
If home biotechnology becomes the latest fad, we'd best start laying down rules, says Freeman Dyson Fifty years ago at Princeton, I watched the mathematician John von Neumann design and build the...
Academe's audit mania means the British scholar can no longer write textbooks, says Steven Kennedy The 2000s should be glory days for British academia. Instead academia faces a real danger of...
Media-land relevance does not always sit well with historical consistency, finds Maria Misra I suppose, like all academics, I've dreamt of making a great splash in my field, founding the Misra School...
Designing a new course module is no mean feat, but it will all seem worthwhile once you've got it right and the students start rolling in, Harriet Swain argues. Your subject needs a revamp. Your...
In the 1980s, the Open University wanted to improve students' learning from television. Viewing sessions with tons of exercises based on the video were arranged nationally and I was put in charge of...
The Disability Discrimination Act has concentrated attention on the needs of disabled students, but while managers in finance and estates departments shake their heads over the costs and logistics of...
Hilary Robinson, head of school, gives the lowdown on art and design at the University of Ulster * Total number of academic staff: 75 (plus three new permanent appointees about to start). * Number of...
UK business schools are refocusing their work and bringing new staff on board to help ring the changes. Aston University's business school is among those revamping its work with a two-year...
Lecturer in law, School of Arts Department of Law, Surrey University Job advertised in The Times Higher , February 6, 2004 The laughter and conversation that reverberate through the corridors of the...
Glasgow University is recruiting eight academic staff, including two professors, for its departments of economics and urban studies and will also make several senior appointments in psychology. The...
Two universities are considering charging top-up fees of less than £3,000 a year in a move that would shatter the national consensus that all institutions will inevitably charge the maximum. Leeds...
Cheer for researchers as tax burden is removed Britain’s universities were yesterday celebrating the decision to scrap a tax they said had reduced their chances of turning scientific discoveries into...
The new student complaints watchdog - the Independent Adjudicator for Higher Education - has paid compensation to students in all of the appeals it has so far upheld. Times Higher, November 26 THE...
By this time next week, the comfortable assumption that any competition in the fast-approaching higher education market would be confined to bursaries and scholarships may have been shattered. Leeds...
The hue and cry over the closure of chemistry departments reached such a pitch this week that the Government was forced to bring forward its announcement on subjects of national strategic...