US universities caught up in crackdown on TikTok
Politicians fight Chinese social media platform over security concerns seen as flawed and even risky, but with possible upside for student mental health

Politicians fight Chinese social media platform over security concerns seen as flawed and even risky, but with possible upside for student mental health

Funders should review how interviews, eligibility criteria and internal selection policies work against marginalised groups, says study co-funded by Wellcome and Oxford

The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media

Increase in tensions in Middle East led to highest ever number of incidents recorded by the Community Security Trust

Rise runs at more than three times the rate of uplift in England

When her broadcasting career took off in her mid-fifties, Mary Beard became one of Britain’s best-known and most-discussed academics. Jack Grove speaks to the retiring Cambridge classicist about her...

The expert in outbreak medicine discusses overcoming early academic challenges, the UK government’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic, and how a chance meeting over bagpipes changed his life

Delivery of educational material chunked at the optimal grade for retention by passive student-consumers is ripe for automation, says Andy Farnell

Florida’s Trumpian governor has repeatedly attacked the freedom and expertise of the state’s university sector. With the Yale and Harvard graduate widely tipped as the 2024 Republican presidential...

Highly regarded institution cuts back due to falling student numbers, high dropout rates and rising energy costs

Former Bank of England deputy governor will replace long-serving president Lee Bollinger

After Lord Wei calls for sector funding to be tied to test of students’ political views, critics say ‘parts of Tory party have gone stark raving mad’

Gay rights champion Robert Wintemute says McGill University’s response to the forced cancellation of his seminar is disappointing

With public rivals putting a ceiling on tuition fees, the demands of debt servicing and digitisation mean private schools must keep growing to avoid mergers or bankruptcy

Policy requiring dons to depart at 67 ‘has not opened up opportunities for younger people’, say professors