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Surveys reveal widespread support among professional staff for working remotely at least some of the time
Alongside the academic edutainer and the policy expert, there should be room for the voice from the wilderness, says Michael Marinetto
Scholars launch bid to create co-working spaces for researchers in cities around UK
Almost a third of university employees globally are on contracts lasting less than two years, according to THE data
THE’s Careers Clinic series brings together the great and the good of higher education to answer a burning careers question
My job is to help young researchers negotiate their own varied and wondrous paths, not track (a version of) my own, says Lucas Lixinski
Scholars should model the constructive criticism of ideas, not yell ‘you're wrong’ during each other’s talks, says Katy Barnett
Move online may have been green but could damage impactful research, THE’s UK Academic Salon hears
As vaccination programmes offer the prospect of a return to physical teaching, what aspects of their pre-pandemic life will academics most heartily re-embrace (or at least touch elbows with)? And are there aspects of locked-down life that they will miss? Our six contributors offer a range of perspectives
Conference hears local job opportunities for partners of researchers may be just as important as institution’s scholarly prowess
US professors often extend off-campus invites, but generally without official guidelines
Qualities of silent endurance and self-containment embodied by the Duke of Edinburgh are unlikely to resonate with, or help, a generation of students faced with adversity, says Adrian Furnham
The loss of the human touch, plus potential tech headaches, make interviewing online an even greater challenge, says Gábor Sarlós
As UK campuses reopen, security staff are hard pressed policing social distancing and delivering toilet rolls to isolating students, says George Bass
THE’s Careers Clinic series brings together the great and the good of higher education to answer a burning careers question
A writing group has become a vital support network for female academics facing everything the pandemic can throw at them, says Sorcha MacLeod
To attract PhD students, advisers must portray competence and warmth. Ben Marder and Sebastian Oliver explain how to optimise your staff profile
Universities must ensure that academics who contribute to the vast online encyclopedia are given the credit they deserve, says Piotr Konieczny
If writers aren’t held responsible for their words, they have no incentive to write reflectively and precisely, says Joe Moran
All faculty endure mounting stress over online instruction, but BAME academics face an even more precarious situation, say Henrika McCoy and Madeline Y. Lee
The emerging online demand for expert content offers an opportunity to scholars working outside formal academia, says Anton Howes
Self-reporting of performance is notoriously unreliable and, more significantly, satisfaction is distinct from well-being, says Stephen Wood
Universities often reproduce colonial logics by exploiting, commodifying and diluting the very ‘thing’ that was to set us free, says Manvir Grewal
Researchers look at opinions about scholars expressed via metaphors – with results ranging from the thought-provoking to the baffling
John McKendrick has recently concluded that we are letting down unsuccessful job applicants by not providing full and constructive feedback
THE’s Careers Clinic brings together the great and the good of higher education to answer a burning careers question
The great loss is the more subtle stuff, such as arching an eyebrow at a pal when Professor X starts droning on, says Athene Donald
Knock-backs are frequent and unavoidable. But treating referees’ comments with a hard-headed pragmatism lessens the sting, says Adrian Furnham
This isn’t the 18th century. Email and phones exist. So why is so much academic discussion still left to journals, asks Julian Baggini
The most successful scholars are those who reach out ‘globally’ by publishing in English. But this narrow ‘internationalisation’ should be challenged, says Hanne Tange
In virtually all our endeavours in the academy, collaboration is valued – so why is the classroom an exception, ask Kwong Nui Sim and Michael Cowling
Mastering the art of saying 'no' is one way academics can protect themselves from spiralling workloads, says psychology lecturer Dean Fido
US-based British physicist reflects on his part in the series that has chronicled his life and scientific career
It will do no harm to find colleagues who understand the role of social, economic and cultural backgrounds in academia, says Carole Binns
Nearly half of all professors in the UK are now aged 55 or over
But for those who wish to continue playing, it takes determination, stamina and strategy when the odds are stacked against you, says Graham Crow
THE’s Careers Clinic brings together the great and the good of higher education to answer a burning careers question
Institutions have introduced four-day weeks during lockdowns, but scholars suspect most changes will be temporary
Survey of Australian researchers also reveals unusual problems associated with home working, including sleepwalkers gatecrashing Zoom calls
UK scholars call for relief on workload to prevent them feeling obliged to send children into schools during crisis
Academic couple Theresa Mercer and Andrew Kythreotis are heading into their third lockdown, along with their kids, but this time the expectations are higher and lessons have been learned
Vice-chancellor says feedback from first lockdown shows four-day week ‘helps improve work-life balance’
Whether academic is in a relationship has bigger impact on their perception of work-life balance than whether or not they have children, research suggests
Both Nottingham universities’ leaders also honoured, along with former AHRC head Andrew Thompson
In their unearthly calm and Dewey Decimal order, university libraries offer the promise of remaking ourselves, says Joe Moran
The past 12 months will live long in the memory, for all the wrong reasons. But as 2020 nears its end amid fairy lights and optimism about vaccines, six academics tell us the bright spots they managed to find amid the gloom – from human connections to elasticated waistbands
Times Higher Education journalists name the academics and administrators who have shaped the debate in the past 12 months
Guitarist who found fame with the Futureheads has set up a degree course with Sunderland to give north-eastern students a taste of music industry and campus life
Professor calls on sector to embrace virtual connections and challenge international academic identity
Academics have long grappled with the strains that job scarcity and the mobility imperative impose on their families. But might the experience of mass remote working finally offer a viable solution, asks Jack Grove
An Australian university’s attitude towards Rwanda illustrates the West’s failure to treat African academics as equal partners, says Timothy Carey
University’s plan to require staff and students to be ‘respectful’ of each other’s ‘differing opinions’ fought by academic opponents
Universities are now committed to ‘celebrating success’ and to treating every failure as just a stepping stone on the way to further success. Yet this, argues Joe Moran, is a betrayal of what really matters in the academy
Some find it difficult to make decisions on their own off-campus, survey suggests
University careers attract intellectually curious people who want to make a difference. But Donna Swarthout has been disillusioned once too often
Island nation’s pandemic management has been the envy of the world, but academics are still paying a price
Being Well in Academia offers guidance on ‘bullying, conflict, death, poverty, racism and violence’, says author and ‘agony aunt’ Petra Boynton
Academic says some safety requirements increase risk to researchers and encourages institutions to take flexible, academic-led approach
Scholar of Native American history shortlisted for two major non-fiction prizes discusses why the US needs a ‘reckoning’ with indigenous dispossession
As the pandemic reshapes both conferencing and publishing, melding talks and papers makes a lot of sense, says Richard Oliver