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Articles by Juliette Rowsell 网曝门>
Vice-chancellor says university has ‘done everything’ it can to reduce costs before cutting jobs
‘Invisible regulators’ to ask harder questions of UK sector investment decisions, professor claims
Happy overseas students push satisfaction with master’s courses to record high, but domestic counterparts are not so bowled over
As more vice-chancellors across the UK emerge from educational backgrounds, rather than academic ones, they argue that academic bias and hierarchies need to be dismantled
Diversity initiatives at the university ‘not working’, says union, as scholarships going to most advantaged students while diversity rates decline
Union leaders warn walkouts over government pay deal will continue indefinitely
English fee rise does little to relieve pressure on institutions, with increased staff costs likely to swallow additional funding
The removal of recruitment caps in 2015 was hailed by ministers as a boon to institutions’ and students’ ambitions. But the tuition fee’s declining value and the Russell Group’s ever-growing market share now threaten the viability of some institutions, and calls are growing for a U-turn, writes Juliette Rowsell
Announcement follows the departure of 400 staff members last year as efforts to close budget black hole continue
Welsh regulator’s perceived failure to follow English sector lead on preventing misconduct seen as contributing to ‘patchy’ protections
Freely available tool performs strongly in trials against human interviewers and traditional online surveys
Universities need ?60 million boost from Holyrood budget to avoid further cuts to per-student funding, says IFS
Union says withdrawal of some business degrees ‘raises serious questions’ but university insists it is separate to wider restructure
Students and alumni fight to save campus dating back to 1822, which was a standalone college of the University of Wales until 2010
Outpost to build on London university’s existing partnerships in West Africa
Faltering UK recruitment is being capitalised on by business schools in the continent
Wartime austerity could slash research output and disproportionately hit disadvantaged students, sector leaders warn
John Cater, who is set to retire after 31 years at the helm of Edge Hill University, warns that sector finances have never been more challenging
University to investigate claims that investigation into abuse in halls of residence was doctored by senior leaders, amid mounting political pressure
In the first round of voting 23,000 staff and alumni voted to establish the final candidates for the university’s chancellor role
UK government expected to maintain tough approach amid warnings of Canada-style caps
UK institutions look ahead to next autumn as survey confirms devastating impact of visa restrictions
President of leading institution says majority of students have been displaced, and funding is a mounting concern