How part-time PhD students view research culture Universities may need to do more to integrate part-time students into their research culture, a survey suggests By Elizabeth Gibney 19 September
Sell-off should not change loan book conditions, says NUS head Toni Pearce confident BIS negotiations will pay dividends for students By John Morgan 19 September
Scientists feel pinch despite R&D plenty 鈥楽table鈥 figures raise question: where has the money gone? By Elizabeth Gibney 19 September
Arab Spring students reluctant to question tutors Scholars say culture of deference stifles development By Jack Grove 19 September
Queen Mary archive is perfect place for tales of the macabre Barts Pathology Museum prepares the specimens for autumn lectures By Matthew Reisz 19 September
British historian says we should 鈥榣ook beyond Europe and America鈥 Lecturer says profession should widen its global outlook By Matthew Reisz 19 September
QAA kudos for Bournemouth student support Rare recognition by standards watchdog By Elizabeth Gibney 19 September
Overseas placements for half of De Montfort students University plans to give graduates more international experience By David Matthews 19 September
Rising US textbook costs provoke digital responses Open educational resources considered by institutions and publishers By Jon Marcus 19 September
Class-based admissions boost campus diversity End of racial affirmative action may not be bad news for minorities, study shows By David Matthews 19 September
Unrest may fuel higher dividends for Brazil鈥檚 for-profits Private sector hopes to grow on back of oil-backed education funding boost By Elizabeth Gibney 19 September
Cable: relax work rules facing overseas graduates Minister鈥檚 call comes as Lib Dem conference votes to remove students from immigration figures By John Morgan 19 September
Welsh universities commit to sharing course material online OER drive by nation鈥檚 institutions will save lecturers time By David Matthews 19 September
Course attracts physics stars into teaching A physics/teaching degree has produced its first graduates By John Elmes 19 September
Odds and quads - 19 September 2013 St John鈥檚 College, Cambridge was established by charter in 1511 through the generosity of Lady Margaret Beaufort (1443-1509) By Matthew Reisz 19 September
National strike ballot called on pay but Liverpool dispute resolved Union members in higher education will be balloted for industrial action over the employers鈥 1 per cent pay offer By John Morgan 18 September
FutureLearn Moocs unveiled Registration on the UK鈥檚 first massive open online course platform has opened following a launch at the British Library. By Elizabeth Gibney 18 September
Clinical trial transparency is criticised by MPs A current lack of transparency in clinical trials is 鈥渦nacceptable鈥, a cross-party group of MPs has said By Elizabeth Gibney 17 September
Moocs UK will offer escape from 鈥楾he Man鈥, says Bean The UK鈥檚 first massive open online course platform will allow students to set their own targets and escape rules set by 鈥淭he Man鈥 By John Morgan 17 September
University debt could come under more scrutiny Universities鈥 borrowing could come under more scrutiny with the form and extent of debts being part of risk assessments by England鈥檚 funding council By John Morgan 17 September
Inside Higher Ed: Faculty respond to threat to academic freedom By Elizabeth Redden, for 16 September
Lib Dems fail to endorse 9k fees as official policy An attempt by senior Liberal Democrats to endorse 拢9,000 fees as official policy has failed, after members clung on to an aspiration to abolish fees By John Morgan 16 September
Furedi criticises 鈥榤ethodologically naive鈥 education research A leading sociologist has attacked the application of so-called 鈥溾榚vidence鈥-based policy鈥 鈥 and much of the research lying behind it 鈥 to education By Matthew Reisz 15 September
Patient involvement in research pays dividends, says study Involving patients in research programmes increases the likelihood of recruiting a target number of people, a study has found. By Elizabeth Gibney 14 September
Race and higher education inquiry launched A cross-party group of MPs has launched an inquiry that will look at the black and minority ethnic community鈥檚 interaction with higher education. By Simon Baker 13 September
Ig Nobel Prizes 2013 revealed Cows may have an unfortunate reputation for being slothful, but even long hours on their pins do not increase the likelihood of them lying down. By Paul Jump 13 September
Immigration 鈥榩aranoia鈥 threatens student recruitment, v-cs told Student recruitment could be jeopardised by 鈥減ublic paranoia鈥 over immigration among the UK鈥檚 鈥渪enophobic鈥 population, vice-chancellors have said. By John Morgan 12 September
NUS president Toni Pearce challenges v-cs on public role Vice-chancellors should take up more prominent public roles as forces for good in society, the National Union of Students president has said. By John Morgan 12 September
European academics 'see a bigger boost' from overseas collaboration US academics are more likely to work with peers outside the US than European researchers are to link up with those outside Europe, a new study says. By Elizabeth Gibney 12 September
Labour would not change 9k fee system, says Cable Vince Cable has predicted that Labour would not change the 拢9,000 fee system, while also forecasting that David Willetts would be safe in a reshuffle. By John Morgan 12 September
LinkedIn posts graduate employment data by university Social network offers comparative information for potential undergraduates By Chris Parr 12 September
Universities should be able to individualise their lecturer training programmes, says HEA head Higher Education Academy chief executive Stephanie Marshall explains her plans for institutions to have autonomy over staff CPD By Jack Grove 12 September
Birmingham pro v-c鈥檚 remark infuriates staff Malcolm Press withdraws claim to have 鈥榤anaged out鈥 under-performing staff at university By Paul Jump 12 September
Privy Council warns BIS not to alter 鈥榮ensitive鈥 word list Response to consultation says change to company name restrictions could aid bogus institutions By John Morgan 12 September
Fees fault line may reopen at Lib Dem conference Opposition grows over motion to 鈥榬etain current system of finance鈥 By John Morgan 12 September
Gender complaints: a third of women perceive unfair treatment Almost one in three senior female academics feels their institution treats staff unfairly in relation to gender, a survey has found By Elizabeth Gibney 12 September
Mature put off by rising costs Independent Commission on Fees sounds warning over applicant numbers By Simon Baker 12 September
Course ratings by the Class of 2009 Almost two-thirds of聽students who graduated in 2008-09 still thought their courses were good value for money three and a聽half years later, a聽survey has found By Elizabeth Gibney 12 September
Russell Group university expands student intake by 1,000 Winners emerge in tug-of-war for ABB students By John Morgan 12 September
Two-year degree cohort still below 2002-03 levels But Hesa data offer signs of hope for shorter courses By John Morgan 12 September
MPs question RCUK鈥檚 gold standard Committee points to 鈥榞aps in qualitative and quantitative evidence鈥 for Finch report recommendations By Paul Jump 12 September
Manchester Met outreach aims to meet public halfway Hip programme targets the groups others cannot reach By Paul Jump 12 September
Newman v-c calls for union of Catholic institutions Leader hopes for cooperative, 鈥榲alues-driven鈥 federation By John Morgan 12 September
Researchers鈥 鈥榰nrealistic鈥 hopes of academic careers Fewer than half of those new to research can expect long-term academic careers By Elizabeth Gibney 12 September
Oxford scraps postgrad financial guarantee policy University rethinks stance after claim that the demand discriminated against poor students By Elizabeth Gibney 12 September
Don鈥檛 be precious, sector鈥檚 teacher educators told Schools can add much to training, says the head of new Sheffield Institute of Education By John Elmes 12 September
Indian students may be priced out of UK by falling rupee Sterling鈥檚 strength may mean weak recruitment, higher education sector warns By David Matthews 12 September
Turkey: the next prime location for overseas recruitment? UK and US universities could profit from growing appetite for study abroad, says report By Jack Grove 12 September
Middle Eastern academies gauge governance for first time World Bank study weighs strengths and flaws of universities in wake of Arab Spring By David Matthews 12 September
Failed partnership costs London Met 拢2m Minutes reveal huge write-off and continuing dispute with LSBF By David Matthews 12 September
Cultural benefits of overseas students championed A new government-commissioned study has championed the cultural and diplomatic benefits to the UK of educating overseas students. By David Matthews 11 September
Academics caught up in Istanbul protests Academics visiting Istanbul for a major conference were among those caught up in student-led protests sparked by the death of a demonstrator. By Jack Grove 11 September