University funding and finances
The LLE is seen as a key part of maintaining employability in rapidly changing employment sectors. Yet with less than six months to go before applications open for the stand-alone modules central to the vision, interest among learners and providers alike appears lukewarm at best. Helen Packer reports
Proposal for riverside Hobart campus to proceed in pared-back form after sell-off of existing base agreed
Institutions capitalise on local interest in research to drive philanthropy, with Griffith University doubling donations over six years
Representative body for country鈥檚 eight institutions loses staff and has functions scaled back with policy work being taken on by in-house teams
鈥楩ocused interim action鈥 required on a sector that politicians say is 鈥榮acrificing fundamental social benefits in the pursuit of corporate outcomes鈥
Unprecedented refusal rates raise fresh doubts over risk rating methodology as officials get tough on 鈥榥on-genuine鈥 students
One of the last members of Universities UK to share financial accounts for 2024-25 posts one of sector鈥檚 biggest shortfalls
Money from Chris Rokos will be used to establish new school of government that will train future leaders
Geopolitical instability and economic challenges mean funding institutions used to rely on has dried up, summit hears
Fundraising becoming ever more important source of income but analysis shows institutions outside of London and Oxbridge struggling to secure increases
Increased federal funding and student demand fuel a boost to most institutions鈥 bottom lines in Sunshine State
A wave of dismay about student loans has flooded the UK media recently, with graduates complaining that ever-rising debt levels are threatening to capsize their personal finances. How could or should the government bail them out? We ask the experts: Philip Augar, Kate Ogden and Nicholas Barr
Institutions face tough choices, as Tertiary Education Commission warns of 鈥榗hallenging fiscal environment鈥
Canberra v-c insists he is not picking a fight with new campaign that pokes fun at more illustrious institutions
Ongoing restructures expected to ease long-term pressures on institutions after sector records collective 拢79 million deficit
Short-term academic work becoming ever bigger problem in Canada as teaching seen as 鈥榲ariable cost鈥 amid changing enrolments and budgetary shocks
Headline enrolment growth masks weaknesses in educational exchange and country鈥檚 standing as a TNE player
Increase in PhD stipends, efforts to estimate true cost of research and reforms to key grant schemes included in long-awaited recommendations from review panel
Treasury reaps the rewards from high contribution rates which appear to be pushing disadvantaged students away from university, analysis finds
University increases size of payout and extends deadline as it insists more staff will take up offer to move pensions after union describes scheme as 鈥榓bject failure鈥
鈥榃e know best鈥 mindset perpetuates Indigenous Australians鈥 isolation from higher education and wealth, report argues
Business leaders might scoff but they benefit most from an educated populace, according to former opposition leader turned vice-chancellor
Teaching staff at post-92 institution to be employed by subsidiary firm and lose right to access expensive pensions scheme
With supercomputing and other AI-related spending prioritised, Research England has told institutions to focus on maintaining existing facilities instead of building new ones
Mega-donation from Ben Delo highlights growing interest from tech moguls in alternative science funding structures
Students offered chance to transfer to university after sudden announcement that College of Osteopaths is shutting
Minister outlines vision of value over volume, amid debate over imperatives to 鈥榤ake a buck鈥
Quid pro quo recognition of prior learning seen as a 鈥榞ame-changing opportunity鈥 for Australian students and universities
Although Trump has rolled back some of Biden鈥檚 programmes, his replacement is still more progressive than England鈥檚 Plan 2 system, says Graeme Atherton
Universities encouraged to develop new sites in flagship Northern Metropolis development, backed by increased government funding
FOI reveals that dozens of English providers applied for an extension from the Office for Students this year
Fees and integrity checks designed for long-stay students risk decimating sector and depriving universities of future enrolments
Outgoing president of ambitious Japanese institution discusses building research capacity, dealing with staff discontent and moving on from reliance on public funding
Incoming government could take sector in different direction, scholars say, depending on which party handed power over key ministry
Scottish higher education minister commits to taking group鈥檚 recommendations seriously as work gets under way on new sustainability framework
Calls for regulator to act on subject review findings and better align education provision with nation鈥檚 needs, as six of its eight universities face deficits
New measures only offer temporary relief as state resources fail to keep pace with rising student numbers and increased costs, say leaders
Lincoln Bishop forms 鈥榮trategic alliance鈥 with mega education group after finding its level of cash was not enough to cover low points during the year
In election year, Scotland鈥檚 higher education minister says fees policy non-negotiable, as newly formed review group looks for new models to heal nation鈥檚 ailing sector
Staff at Strathclyde and Durham vote to walk out in disputes over job losses and workloads, while Northumbria to be hit with disruption in row over pensions
Former first minister advocates for progressive taxes as way of funding higher education as debates ramp up over who should pay for university
Greenwich to change name to London and South East University Group before Kent joins as new 鈥榮uperuniversity鈥 takes shape
Fresh models of university outposts emerging in regions without access to higher education as financial crisis sees shuttering of traditional campuses
Finance minister outlines real-terms funding increase and new 鈥榰niversity township鈥 model, but scholars remain sceptical
For-sale city-centre site not worth as much as thought, says university, after accounts reveal scale of financial challenge
The downturn in overseas student numbers shows the folly of relying on a small number of volatile markets, say George Pavlakos and Estelle Zinsstag
Most low-performing English students will not repay loans, argues campaigner, who says more needs to be done to educate people about system
Financially troubled institutions pushed further into the red, with Aberdeen, Robert Gordon and Sheffield Hallam also losing money
Rule changes seen as way of improving safety while avoiding billions of dollars being wasted on 鈥榰nnecessary compliance costs鈥
Sheffield, Lancaster and Surrey confirm they are walking away from proposed three-year deal with world鈥檚 largest academic publisher
Regional Australian university joins nine others in establishing South Asian outpost, promising revenue will support New South Wales heartland
Scholars criticise 鈥榗rude鈥 exercise as Middle Eastern country tops list of donors after US institutions forced to disclose foreign funds
Analyst predicts end to enrolment uncertainty despite pressure on South Asia, onshore demand and postgraduate programmes
Buyers remain keen on UK higher education despite financial turmoil 鈥 but bringing in private equity can create challenges for educators
Sharp increases in outlay in recent years along with changes to the English system put pressure on Wales to ensure student loans 鈥榬emain sustainable鈥, says report
Institutions reliant on cross-subsidy model need to learn how to adapt to policy changes more quickly, says Universities UK chief
University claims staff are in breach of contract for failing to reorganise lectures lost during recent industrial action
Union leader says Southend campus closure will 鈥榯ake the heart out of the town鈥
Fee freezes bring down spend per student, as overall funding for education in England reaches historic lows
Some of president鈥檚 most audacious cuts have been scaled back or suspended but a year of turmoil is beginning to show in institutions鈥 bottom lines