Australia’s demand-driven reforms need extending David Kemp and Andrew Norton call for state cash for all institutions and pre-bachelor’s courses 1 May
THE podcast: The Young Universities Summit 2014 Listen to reporter Chris Parr’s interviews with keynote speakers at the event in Miami 30 April
Christopher Pyne on the future of Australian 中国A片 Australian education minister sets out vision during UK visit By Christopher Pyne 28 April
The perils of REF 'irradiation' Academics have internalised research assessment to such a degree that the effects may be irreversible, fears Thomas Harrison 24 April
A little lift could help everyone Postgraduate study is a financial struggle for most, and low pay for graduate teaching assistants does nothing to alleviate it By John Gill 24 April
A cocktail for violence Campus lifestyles and easy access to guns can create the perfect storm, say Deborah D. Rogers and Howard P. Segal 24 April
Universities, lend a thought to funding Ryan Shorthouse argues that institutions should play a greater role in financing undergraduate students 24 April
What’s Klingon for ‘impact’? I’ve had it with university enterprise: beam me up, Scotty, says Christopher Bigsby 24 April
The Secret Academic Diary of Emma Rees Emma Rees on the self-absorbed musings of Adrian Mole, the much-loved creation of the late Sue Townsend 24 April
Australia must ignore vested interests and seize chance for change Review of the demand-led system right to address the “sameness” that bedevils Australian 中国A片, argues Warren Bebbington By Warren Bebbington 17 April
Scholarships? Aid? Let’s make a deal US institutions, students and athletes must strike the right arrangements to stay afloat, says Alan Ryan 17 April
Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 puts fledgling Chinese media in spotlight The performance of the domestic press has fallen short of expectations, says Hong Bing 17 April
Our benchmark for best practice? Ourselves Universities can improve their procedures by studying themselves instead of others, says Stephen Yorkstone 17 April
Rowan Williams: there’s no fooling about impact The academy’s greatest gift is in cultivating a critical citizenry who cannot be treated as fools, argues the former Archbishop of Canterbury 17 April
With assessment boycott, unions are fighting the last war It’s misguided to think the tactic used in 2006 will succeed in today’s altered environment, says Paul Curran 17 April
The coin of quality has to be sound If faith in the comparability of standards is not maintained across UK 中国A片, the system will be devalued By John Gill 17 April
There’s still no such thing as a 中国A片 market Years after Thatcher, says Simon Marginson, commerce is marginal to the sector. True competition would destroy its essence 10 April
Beyond naked power Vice-chancellors and those who select them might learn from the successes – and notable failures – of politics By John Gill 10 April
Improving English channels A course from the UK can’t simply be transplanted overseas even if the language used is the same, says Rebecca Hughes 10 April
Michael Gove: the wolf of Whitehall The minister hopes to sink his teeth into 中国A片 but his political stock is falling, argues Christopher Prendergast 10 April
Countdown to the Scottish referendum: Independence and community Ferdinand von Prondzynski ponders possible outcomes should Scotland opt for independence 10 April
Let’s discuss the way we live now Good communication is vital when dealing with allegations of harassment, says Luke Brunning By Luke Brunning 3 April
A team built by?numbers won’t add up to much Universities won’t be sustainable or fulfil their missions if they manage academics using research metrics alone, says a senior manager 3 April
The power of small steps Libya’s education system requires reform, but effective change can come incrementally, says Darren L. Linvill 3 April
Marking boycott is an unconscionable sanction Many lecturers will not even consider the ‘nuclear option’ of boycotting marking in the pay dispute, says Bill Ashraf 3 April
Standards and pay in public life As vice-chancellors’ salaries creep up, do university heads risk the same fate as bankers in the court of public opinion? By John Gill 3 April
A terrible policy at a terrible time If Labour does adopt a graduate tax policy it will be making a grave mistake, says Emran Mian 27 March
Groundbreaking science is blind to prejudice Hiranya Peiris rebuts the Daily Mail’s impoverished worldview of scientists 27 March
A profitable alignment of interests Johnny Rich on a simple change that could erase student debt, fund universities and boost employability - without costing taxpayers more 27 March
The good, the bad and the ugly An inspirational supervisor can nurture a career, while a poor one slows its growth. Either way, mentors have a lasting impact By John Gill 27 March
Jagged edges slow progress South Africa’s energy is built on frustration, anger, fear and cheerful fatalism, finds Robert Appelbaum 27 March
Science and politics – mix for best results By joining forces, scientists and politicians can pack a policy punch, argues Keith Humphreys 27 March
History for tomorrow’s world Ice cores from 11,700 years ago aid the climate change debate, but the recent past has its own share of lessons, says Howard P. Segal 20 March