Chris Havergal was appointed editor of?Times Higher Education?in March 2025. Prior to that he spent eight years as news editor. He joined?THE in 2014 as a reporter, covering areas such as?teaching and learning, access, and internationalisation.?Chris started his career as local government correspondent at the Cambridge News and holds a BA in history and an MA in medieval studies from the University of York.
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Articles by Chris Havergal 网曝门>
Responses of more than 24,000 undergraduates indicate limited development in areas such as creativity and citizenship over course of degree
Black, Chinese and Asian undergraduates report highest level of skill development
Cambridge Assessment study finds independent sector pupils up to four times more likely to achieve at least one top grade
Robert Gordon University says Trump has made ‘statements that are wholly incompatible with the ethos and values of the university’
But despite increased income, academics increasingly employed on teaching-only contracts, says King’s College London study
Problems with Jisc-operated network stretch into second day
Better training will help communities to prevent and deal with consequences of procedure, says vice-chancellor
Former Edinburgh vice-principal faced criticism during her tenure but has enjoyed recent success
Fair access tsar warns ‘top-down meddling’ would be a ‘costly, bureaucratic exercise’
Key predictions from the Open University and SRI International report
Open University report predicts that adaptive teaching tools will grow in popularity, but highlights need to tread carefully with the data they collect on students
Universities should expect to take ‘primary responsibility’ for many areas of support, minister says
Birmingham v-c among those warning BIS select committee against Green Paper proposals
Students living at Hawkridge House complained of vermin infestation and noise from building works
Vice-chancellors say funding should be redirected to means-tested maintenance grants
Higher Education Funding Council for England says proposals will be reviewed but wins broad support for principles
Durham pro vice-chancellor warns that institutions would be forced to challenge a worse-than-expected judgement
Preparing to launch its multidisciplinary degree, institution bids others across Europe to follow suit
King’s College London research finds that ability of metrics to predict problems in higher education providers is ‘extremely limited’
Study suggests students taught by academics with teaching qualifications are more likely to pass, but less likely to get first-class scores
Government relaxes student loan eligibility rules but confirms plan to freeze repayment threshold, as student opportunity funding also targeted
UCU members to strike following decision by governing council, which affects more than 500 jobs
Stanford University to assist in development of programmes to be introduced in January
European Quality Assurance Forum told ‘surprisingly little work’ conducted on value of members’ activities