REF 2021: Communication, cultural and media studies, library and information management LSE finishes on top again as Cardiff and Leicester repeat strong performances 12 May
REF 2021: Politics and international studies The University of Strathclyde tops the ranking, with Royal Holloway coming second 12 May
REF 2021: Social work and social policy LSE tops the table with Bristol second and Oxford falling from first to sixth 12 May
REF 2021: Outputs scores Imperial College London on top for key Research Excellence Framework performance metric focused on quality 12 May
REF 2021: Sociology Oxford and Cambridge rise up the table, replacing York and Manchester in the top two positions 12 May
REF 2021: Impact scores Medicine-focused institutions perform strongly on metric given weighting in latest round of Research Excellence Framework 12 May
REF 2021: Anthropology and development studies London School of Economics leads in anthropology and development unit of assessment table 12 May
REF 2021: Environment scores ‘Golden triangle’ institutions perform strongly on metric which accounts for 15 per cent of overall Research Excellence Framework scores 12 May
REF 2021: Sport and exercise sciences, leisure and tourism University of Exeter tops the table based on GPA 12 May
REF 2021: 探花视频’s table methodology How we analyse the results of the Research Excellence Framework By THE reporters 12 May
REF 2021: Modern languages and linguistics York is out in front for modern languages and linguistics while Bristol and Nottingham move up 12 May
Number of Americans with college but no degree nears 40 million Clearinghouse tally held up as incentive for institutions to encourage returners, while also affirming scale of political dilemma confronting Biden By Paul Basken 11 May
Digital Universities US: US ‘risks missing out’ on long-term benefits of online learning Virtual tools have unprecedented power to bend teaching towards research-proven ideals, yet opportunity of lockdown getting squandered, MIT experts tell colleagues By Paul Basken 11 May
New Zealand brings forward border reopening for overseas students Country’s universities have ‘a lot of catching up to do’ despite two-month reprieve By John Ross 11 May
Swedish universities nervously await ‘flood’ of adult learners Funding reforms set to drive up demand, but institutions uncertain about likely intake and course interest By Ben Upton 11 May
More time on research means lower scores for students – study Universities must ‘recalibrate promotion criteria’ to place more value on teaching, says scholar By Pola Lem 11 May
University keeps police bomber’s PhD thesis under wraps La Trobe prolongs blackout on Russell Street bomber Craig Minogue’s dissertation, citing concerns over ‘identifying material’ By John Ross 11 May
UCU set for showdown over transgender rights stance Members asked to back motion opposing ‘gender critics’ and ‘transphobes’ By Tom Williams 11 May
Queen’s Speech: bill planned for lifelong loans and entry bars Plan for legislation seems to firm up government plans for minimum entry requirement and student number controls By John Morgan 10 May
Overseas students feel the heat as Australia heads for the polls Blamed for housing prices largely beyond their own reach, overseas students are both courted and resented By John Ross 10 May
Fund us to do our job, New Zealand sector tells Wellington Underfunding, compliance costs and buffer targets have left universities with ‘no room to manoeuvre’, says representative group By John Ross 10 May
Indian Institutes of Technology hit internationalisation ceiling Portion of overseas students remains low, with IITs reluctant to make concessions on admissions criteria By Pola Lem 10 May
UK research status ‘at real risk’ as Horizon row damage widens UK will give up its leadership role in EU-wide research projects for a back seat if association impasse drags on, warns Liverpool science chief By Jack Grove 10 May
Germany’s strict return to classrooms risks ‘missed opportunity’ Universities seen as lacking capacity and strategy to embrace blended learning long-term By Ben Upton 10 May
Set carbon budgets to limit university flights, say researchers Academics urge action to avoid losing pandemic-era gains, also suggesting making emissions a key factor in project evaluations By Simon Baker 10 May
Oxford names neuroscientist Irene Tracey as vice-chancellor Merton College warden boasts long association with city and university, but is relative newcomer to top-level leadership By Chris Havergal 9 May
UK student mental health crisis ‘may be worse than thought’ Study highlights significant under-reporting of anxiety and stress, with male and ethnic minority learners among least likely to seek help By Tom Williams 9 May
English number caps ‘could be seen as signal of poor quality’ Universities UK fears restricting student numbers at particular providers could have damaging reputational effects By Tom Williams 9 May
‘First causal evidence’ that degrees ‘make people more liberal’ Study finds getting a degree reduces authoritarianism and racial prejudice and increases economic right-wing attitudes By John Morgan 9 May
Australian job losses ‘not driven by pandemic necessity’ Extent of staffing overhauls bore little relationship to Covid’s financial carnage, says report By John Ross 9 May
Scholars tipped to desert universities if US states ban abortion After leaked version of US Supreme Court ruling, conservative-state universities face prospect of sliding further behind on quality By Paul Basken 9 May
Australia struggles to get medical students to work in regions Less than 5 per cent of medical students on indentureship deal have fulfilled obligations to work outside cities By John Ross 8 May
India ‘weaponises’ higher education by rejecting Pakistan degrees Pakistani scholars blast move by India’s University Grants Commission, calling it ‘discriminatory, illogical and unilateral’ By Pola Lem 7 May
Graduations at risk as UK marking boycott planned from 23 May Academics at 44 institutions to refuse to mark work or set exams in midst of busy summer assessment period, in ongoing row over pay and pensions By Tom Williams 6 May
Iran threatens academic’s execution ‘to thwart war crimes trial’ Swedish-Iranian academic Ahmadreza Djalali is given execution date on the day ‘historic’ trial ends By Ben Upton 6 May
Overseas students trickle into New Zealand before border reopens Special intake should be at least doubled, vice-chancellor says By John Ross 6 May
Mid-career female researchers ‘need bespoke research grants’ UK professional bodies for mathematicians call for specialist funding to help female senior lecturers whose research careers are blown off course By Jack Grove 6 May
New threat to Melbourne’s Australia India Institute Rival centre’s establishment highlights the problems for thinktanks in universities By John Ross 6 May
Devi Sridhar: pandemic vitriol ‘has taken its toll’ Academic who has become a lightning rod for criticism over her pandemic advice reflects on two years in the eye of the Covid storm By Jack Grove 6 May
US military failing to shift funding to minority universities Pentagon fell short on promises to help HBCUs compete for research grants, though institutions see new motivation from foreign tensions By Paul Basken 6 May
Minimum entry bar would ‘undermine British values on aspiration’ Government plan would also mean alternative non-degree qualifications being downgraded in eyes of employers, MillionPlus warns By John Morgan 5 May
Ouriginal chief defends Turnitin takeover against monopoly jibes Merger of two of the biggest plagiarism checkers will help combat more sophisticated forms of cheating, Andreas Ohlson says By Tom Williams 5 May
Are corporate interests taking over US higher education? Just as campaigns to promote societal benefit show strength, activists admit setbacks in wider battleground for basic academic freedom By Paul Basken 5 May
European universities fear funding cuts as defence spending hiked Dutch universities among those fearing multibillion-euro redistribution By Ben Upton 5 May
Black historian claims Bristol used her as ‘human shield’ Olivette Otele criticises employer’s reliance on her research, saying overwork and back-stabbing led her to burnout By Jack Grove 5 May
Funding shortfall on each UK undergraduate ‘will double to ?4K’ Average deficit incurred by English universities for teaching a UK student will more than double to about ?4,000 in 2024-25, Russell Group warns By John Morgan 5 May
End of affirmative action badly hit medical student diversity Minority public medical school enrolment seen down by more than third in five years in US states that banned racial considerations in admissions By Paul Basken 4 May
Oxford launches foundation year for students with BBB grades University follows Cambridge in offering gifted state school students chance to take fully funded introductory year By Tom Williams 4 May
Universities pay out record compensation as complaints rise Ombudsman says difficulties finding alternative remedies during pandemic partly to blame for ?1.3 million bill By Tom Williams 4 May
China crackdown ‘hit US scientists’ research quality’ US project leaders with history of China collaboration ‘saw dent to citations’ By Simon Baker 4 May
As UK industrial disputes drag on, should union rethink tactics? UCU pushes on with shrinking rounds of strike action despite calls to regroup and rethink By Tom Williams 4 May
Australian universities report record earnings despite pandemic As staff reel from an austerity drive, Victoria produces its first A$3 billion institution By John Ross 3 May
US government let Facebook take personal student data Education Department admits data-diverting code in federal aid website, toughening politics for institutional performance monitoring By Paul Basken 3 May
Footballers’ ‘university’ eyes growth as first students graduate UA92 hails success of strategy attracting disadvantaged students but remains loss-making By Tom Williams 3 May
Academy’s database boycott may herald Chinese publishing shake-up Scholars question whether open access platforms could step in to replace dominance of China National Knowledge Infrastructure By Pola Lem 3 May
China’s overseas graduates ‘mismatched’ with jobs back home Findings raise red flag for Australia’s economically crucial international enrolments By John Ross 3 May
Information and guidance ‘crucial to lifelong learning reforms’ Universities UK backs plans but stresses that they must be easy to understand and avoid bureaucracy for all involved By Tom Williams 2 May
Soaring inflation hits Australian students and universities Generation-high inflation raises particular issues for humanities students and universities confronting a demographic bulge By John Ross 2 May
Russia seeks India ties as Western sanctions hit universities Kremlin’s push on technological sovereignty met with scepticism as West shuns partnerships over Ukraine war By Pola Lem 2 May