Universities reshape curricula to teach the pandemic
Scholars in the US and Canada reveal how they are changing things up in order to teach the topic of Covid-19 as it is happening

Scholars in the US and Canada reveal how they are changing things up in order to teach the topic of Covid-19 as it is happening

UPP Foundation calls for universities to take greater role in rejuvenating ‘left behind’ regions in England, as pandemic job losses loom in these areas

Discussions about how the UK’s largest pension scheme covers its deficit ought to consider whether all employers and members should pay the same rate, argues Paul Hamilton

Less academically inclined students should not spread their net too widely, Australian research suggests

Union accuses government of ‘gambling with the health of the nation’

But president Alexander Lukashenko has been forced to replace rectors, and some university managers have refused to expel students – suggesting regime control is not complete

Coronavirus will not stop China’s growing and ambitious middle class from seeking a Western university education for their children, says Sabrina Wang

Bloomsbury Institute added to English register after Court of Appeal quashed Office for Students’ original refusal

Almost all higher education institutions in the country have signed a document committing to combating the climate crisis, says Göran Finnveden

Pandemic and population losses leave private institutions especially vulnerable, Moody’s finds

Belinda Robinson leaves to focus on board roles

Employers seeking ‘diversity of thought’ and ‘relevance’ end reliance on English university hierarchy for hiring decisions

Greater diversity is needed within higher education’s libraries, says Regina Everitt, one of very few BAME directors of a university library in the UK

Female academics, especially mothers, face the double challenge of patriarchy and neoliberal management

Ministers’ eagerness to launch yet another review when so many others remain unpublished is testing the patience of universities, says Andrew McRae