探花视频’s Digital Teaching Survey results
Universities’ wariness of online instruction was?suddenly swept aside last year by Covid-19. But how successful has the overnight digital transition been? Is it sustainable? And should it be? Paul...
Universities’ wariness of online instruction was?suddenly swept aside last year by Covid-19. But how successful has the overnight digital transition been? Is it sustainable? And should it be? Paul...
Survey suggests move to regional mobility may have been temporary response to pandemic
Few areas of higher education and research have been left untouched by the Covid-19 pandemic – and during 2020, trends emerged that the academic community will be keeping a close eye on in 2021. Here...
The Turing mobility scheme is a poor substitute for Erasmus+ but UK universities must learn to love it or it will soon crumble, says Marcus Dowse
A look at the most-read?探花视频?university rankings articles from the past 12 months
Virus management earns no brownie points for Antipodean education, with UK ranked higher even on safety
Invaluable Mao era materials will be digitised on an open-access platform
New minister’s old work on online education could be revived to encourage tertiary sector integration, experts say
Turing scheme will not cover tuition fees, travel costs to the UK or staff exchanges, leaving UK universities to negotiate fee waivers
Nine senior leadership summits, plus range of regional and thematic forums and seminars, planned
Survey finds Australia and other destinations are losing ground to the UK, with health management becoming ‘less of a?differentiator’
The country’s universities have shot up global rankings on the back of huge investment and a ruthless focus on publication. But as the country gears up for its next five-year plan, Joyce Lau asks...
Minister tells?THE?summit that space project on which she works typifies national priority to diversify economy
International higher education scholar suggests global science is entering a new era of fragility
Survey finds that university presidents in North America are much less likely to feel ready to cope with the crisis this academic year than those in Asia and Oceania