Talent pipeline for the UK鈥檚 拢100 billion creative arts industries is under threat as universities shutter loss-making arts degrees, says Ravensbourne vice-chancellor Andy Cook
College courses based on Swift and other pop stars grow quickly in US, promising academic value for instructors battling to maintain weakened attention spans
The artistic team behind the unsettling production explain why they wanted to explore the psychology of the country鈥檚 biggest biomedical research scandal
The UK鈥檚 first Palestinian vice-chancellor discusses proving the value of creative degrees in a hostile climate, how to internationalise rural towns and what growing up with nine siblings can teach you about academic life
Resistance to the knowledge generated by science will only be overcome with the help of the humanities. But what can universities do to bridge C.鈥塒. Snow鈥檚 famous divide between these fields, which endures to this day?
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
High-profile figures criticise university鈥檚 plans for large cuts to arts and humanities, which it says are necessary because of the pandemic and low student numbers
Dread of 鈥榮elling out鈥 and heroic figure of 鈥榮truggling artist鈥 cause many creative arts graduates to persist with dead-end jobs rather than maximising their skills in alternative careers, says Martha Bloom
The Holberg prizewinner describes how she forged a new discipline in response to the 鈥榯heoretically thin鈥 and 鈥榟istorically unimaginative鈥 art history she was trained in
The 鈥榯ransvestite potter鈥 is used to creating a stir, but is his freewheeling approach a benefit or a curse when it comes to being a university chancellor? And should art schools still tolerate students like him? Matthew Reisz fires the questions