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>
Nearly a third of university graduates who are employed as interns receive no pay, a new report says
Action follows management decision to withhold pay from academics taking part in marking boycott
SNP administration puts forward proposals for new legislation to follow von Prondzynski review
Higher tuition fees in the UK have not slowed the long-term trend of increasing demand for university education, according to a new analysis by Ucas.
Non-EU cohort under pressure to secure work after the abolition of the post-study work visa
Cutbacks of up to 15% loom if gap cannot be plugged by Stormont
A Brexit would reduce the UK’s relationship to the EU to that of Botswana’s or Chile’s, research expert claims
Northern Irish universities have announced plans to cut student numbers by up to 1,100 next year in the face of multimillion-pound cuts
But higher education still biggest recipient of major gifts
The vice-chancellor of the University of Cambridge has criticised the “ever more parochial” attitude to immigration in the UK.
Earnings gap greater in UK and US, suggests Institute of Education research
Deputy vice-chancellor Peter Slee describes the demanding approach that has led to rising standards
Discussion focuses on how European universities can move beyond the Bologna Process and compete at a global level
Students will join prisoners in what the institution says is a European first
Amount spent on bursaries and grants cut by almost ?40 million last year
Reports that thousands of student places could be cut
Key members argue that ‘innocent’ students need greater concessions
Union members at the University of South Wales are set to strike in a row over job cuts
Welsh government ministers have offered reassurance over academic freedom as new powers for the country’s university funding council are debated
Paper by academics calls for greater transparency
Scottish government wants immigration powers devolved to Holyrood
Institution incentivises students to learn their native tongue as it delivers dual language courses
Apprentice interviewer Claude Littner offers UK business schools advice on balancing the practical and the theoretical
Universities should encourage graduates to stay in the city where they studied by helping them to find jobs and housing, a report recommends.