The week in higher education – 20 August 2015
The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the national press

The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the national press

Move away from command and control model to increase staff engagement, advises Leadership Foundation paper

Don’t let the sneering scare you; the medium is the best fit for some projects, argues Richard Sugg

Shahidha Bari on academics’ strange relationship with the idea of failure

Kate MacDonald reflects on playing the student name game in the Belgian academy

Eminent sociologist has recycled 90,000 words of material across a dozen books, claims paper

The full impact of the abolition of the cap on student numbers won’t be felt immediately, suggests Emran Mian

As ministers and schools lose patience with GCSE and A-level grade and fee inflation, Louis Goddard looks to the past for new solutions

Study suggests BME students could be missing out on places because institutions are trying to shape ethnic mix

Proposed Twitter-based altmetric would treat retweets like citations

Universities believed to be looking to Continent to make up shortfalls in domestic enrolment

High costs, long commutes and insecure jobs may explain figures from Best University Workplace Survey 2015
The article on staff teaching qualifications suggests that the high number of “unknowns” is an obstacle to the inclusion of this measure in the teaching excellence framework (“Will lack of data on...
In the weeks since the difficult decision was made that Heythrop College would cease being a constituent college of the University of London in three years, our governors and staff have been...
Robert Allison was right to point out in a blog post that the admissions system is confusing and unfair (“Clearing 2015: universities must put students first”, 12 August). As the recruitment cap is...