Household Horror: Cinematic Fear and the Secret Life of Everyday Objects, by Marc Olivier
Nathan Abrams is intrigued by the creepy possibilities film directors have found in refrigerators, typewriters and shower curtains

Nathan Abrams is intrigued by the creepy possibilities film directors have found in refrigerators, typewriters and shower curtains

Labour calls on prime minister to take ‘personal responsibility’ for fixing assessment crisis

Experts laud move to welcome international universities despite hurdles and lack of immediate interest

Patchy access to computers and lack of internet connections among poorest learners hamper transition

Critics say Australian inquiry excluded external witnesses and rationalised questionable activities

System consolidation, regulatory simplification and undergraduate flexibility are positive steps, says Pushkar

India’s National Education Policy aims to establish a seamless connectivity between humanities and science, says Rup Narayan Das

Anna McKie speaks to three experts about why unconventional assessment can revolutionise students’ outcomes − and how to do it

Sustainable changes in digital learning will result from best practice alongside bold experimentation, say Friedrich Hesse, Volker Meyer-Guckel, Bitange Ndemo, Alexandros Papaspyridis, Rahim Rajan...

Assessing doctoral candidates’ published papers instead would teach more useful skills and improve morale, says Noam Schimmel

Rankings skew Australia’s top universities as they parlay profits from foreign students to snap up the world’s most talked about researchers

Academics may wish we weren’t here, but burying heads in the sand about the depth of the deficit is no longer viable, says Bernard Casey

Caps on places and bigger rise in share of top grades at independent schools could lead to skewed intakes

English regulator ordered to pay substantial costs to Bloomsbury Institute after blocking loan access

University denies favouring black applicants over white and Asian American candidates