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UUK must help advance equality at the front of the lecture hall through loan write-offs and conferences, says Geraldine Van Bueren
Scholars and their significant others share the good, the bad and the ugly
Students are too often micromanaged and policed while on campus, and it needs to stop, writes Frank Furedi
Would you prefer to live as a badger, an otter, a swift, an urban fox or a deer? We speak to the academic who did all five
Johannes Angermuller is a linguist in the UK, a sociologist in Germany and a mixture of both in France. How do you define your academic self?
We all need good advice – the problem is making sure you know where to find it, and how to accept it, says John Tregoning
We talk doctor supply, the importance of medical research and impostor syndrome with the new Medical Schools Council chair
Academic science still operates on assumptions that have failed to catch up with the realities of today’s family lives, argue scholars
The country’s learners and academics are more thoughtful, engaged and generous than their UK counterparts, says Sam Gilchrist Hall
We speak to the head of Nanyang Technological University about the rise of Asia, what it’s like being a European leading a Singaporean institution, and barbecue chicken
Peer reviews created by self-generated text machines are the latest threat to scientific integrity
Large-scale quantitative analysis of university grades confirms the existence of slump in second-year marks first observed in the 1950s
The historic UK referendum result is a challenge to the core beliefs of those attending this year’s EAIE annual conference, says Jack Grove
We talk civic engagement and the dream of all academic subjects incorporating the arts with St Andrews' new theatre chief
Why are postgraduates and postdocs so expendable and professors so untouchable, asks a geneticist subjected to a paranoid boss’ abuse
A new report suggests standards by which departments may consider social media and other public communications in promotion decisions
Humorous tribute to academia’s unsung heroes will be based outside a Moscow university
Is enough being done early on to prevent under-represented groups from leaving philosophy, asks Briana Toole
As THE’s HE and Me interview section passes a special landmark, John Elmes looks back over three years’ worth of laughs, tears, and a whole lot of column inches
David Walker looks at the increasing acceptance that the pressures of university can exacerbate impostor syndrome for students as well as staff
Seeking feedback from the well networked is better than gaining comments from famous scholars, a conference hears
A leading American medievalist has died
We talk government-university relationships, protecting Welsh students’ finances and the highs and lows of supporting Cardiff City FC, with the former politician
With the link between frequent library use and higher grades confirmed, Jack Grove asks if it is time for more universities to start measuring how long students spend in the stacks
Nearly 70, his mortgage paid and his children settled, John Kirkaldy realises it’s not too late to indulge in a globetrotting adventure
As the £650 million Crick Institute officially opens, here are some key facts about Europe’s largest biomedical research laboratory
Jack Grove asks whether the push to tackle gender inequality has led to discrimination against male scholars
Welfare state expert Peter Taylor-Gooby cheerfully admits his research has had no real-world influence – but hopes a book might
We talk Australian wildfires, the emerging field of environmental humanities and rock musician aspirations with Bath Spa’s new interdisciplinary professor
Rachel Moss on why academic women might find maternity leave a sometimes challenging experience
Unconscious bias training for those on promotion and recruitment panels may help tackle deficit of senior BME staff, says Leadership Foundation study
An ‘infectiously brilliant’ intellectual historian has died
We talk widening participation, gender discrimination in film, and wishing on shooting stars with the French former film executive
Lincoln Allison takes a fond look back at the permissiveness prevalent at universities in the 1960s and 1970s, while a more ambivalent Susan Bassnett recalls a reality that didn’t quite live up to the nostalgic hype
Levels of nepotism in scientific publishing have been revealed by report
Senior management do not recognise support staff’s pivotal role in achieving positive student outcomes, administrators say
Trends in international mobility may explain why fewer women are reaching the top ranks of academia, a Spanish study suggests
We talk tuberculosis, tough decisions and pancake races with the Manchester vice-chancellor
Supervisors explain how to help students keep their research on track
The Games remind cerebral sorts that the brain resides in an amazing physical vessel, Shahidha Bari writes
Handing out honorary degrees doesn't always go as planned
As he bins decades-old lecture notes, Ron Iphofen wonders what unused but undiscarded relics populate scholars’ shelves, discs and drives
An embarrassing incident led academic and sex blogger Katie Beswick to reflect on the risks and rewards of being open online
Ana Mari Cauce, who is Cuban-American and gay, aims to improve race and identity relations on campus
We talk to the digital publishing specialist about bringing historical figures to life, including the founder of the Pearly Kings and Queens, and how to eat lychees
Matthew Reisz talks to academics about their summer habits, while two professors and an estates director explain how they use the time
Pro-gun group tries to block policy allowing concealed weapons ban in offices
Matthew Reisz discovers that campuses in August may be a frenzied whirlwind of activity
Academia is used to robust debate. But the trolling that happens online should not be tolerated, writes Elaine Campbell
Centre for Macroeconomics survey finds support for ‘institutional change’ in profession
Despite a long history of trailblazing female academics, Europe's academy is making slow progress in promoting more women to senior roles, says lobby group
We talk gangsters, London crime and dodging punches with the noted ethnographer
Academia takes in some truly esoteric topics and tasks, but what are the strangest jobs? Here, five individuals with surprising roles describe their work
With retirement age approaching, Irritable Male Syndrome is hitting Mark Montgomery particularly, unexpectedly, hard
Matthew Reisz wanders down some of the odder byways of the university scene
A rigorous methodology is essential to manage university patent portfolios, say Bruno Reynolds and Ben Oakley from Isis Enterprise in Oxford
Vic Boyd was on the lookout for academic writing opportunities. What she found was somewhat less appetising...
We talk about the impenetrability of physics, the problem with Psi and “corporate uni bollocks”
Rather than resisting the growing emphasis on employability, academics should be seeking to drive the process, argues Benjamin Poore
Few academic department heads receive any formal leadership training when they step up into middle management, a study says