South Korea debates admissions as elite ‘feeder’ schools lose licences Scholars question whether move against autonomous private schools will go far enough in equalising university admissions By Ellie Bothwell 24 July
Palestinian university fights Israeli visa restrictions Rising numbers of overseas academics have been hit with visa denials or refused entry to Palestine, scholars say By Ellie Bothwell 23 July
Rankings swagger seen as a double-edged sword Universities fuel governments’ appetites for metrics when they brag about their rankings, summit hears By John Ross 23 July
THE Leadership Summit: Chinese universities ‘not rolling in cash’ 'We have budget troubles too', provost of China’s leading university insists By John Ross 20 July
THE Leadership Summit: how AI is changing the way universities work Event hears how machine learning can aid student progress and curriculum design – and that academics should let AI ‘take over’ admissions By John Ross 19 July
THE Leadership Summit: doctors ‘make good vice-chancellors’ Forum mulls the merits of external experience, elected leaders and 10-year term limits By John Ross 19 July
THE Leadership Summit: lack of student belonging ‘creates resentment’ In times of conflict it is best to meet students on their own turf, University of Cape Town leader says By John Ross 18 July
THE World Reputation Rankings 2019: results announced Analysis of academic survey suggests differences in perceived university prestige based on age of scholar By Ellie Bothwell 17 July
China trials dual academic-technical courses to drive status shift Worries over economy and graduate employability prompt trial of ‘1+X’ model in 10 provinces By John Ross 11 July
Time to talk, Hong Kong university leaders tell combatants Digging in will solve nothing, university presidents say, as protests continue By John Ross 8 July
Turkey crackdown ‘will have knock-on effect’ for research quality ‘Bad science’ could gain traction in the country as academics seek not to provoke regime By Simon Baker 7 July
Academics split on risk to universities after Hong Kong protests Observers suggest attempts to influence campus affairs – directly or indirectly – might increase after assault on legislature By John Ross 4 July