Many traps for novice authors
Writing a textbook is no way to get rich quick, according to Lawrence Knowles A friend recently received three contract proposals from publishers interested in a textbook he wants to write. He has...
Writing a textbook is no way to get rich quick, according to Lawrence Knowles A friend recently received three contract proposals from publishers interested in a textbook he wants to write. He has...
Anne White reflects on the success of a graduate training programme in biological sciences Gone are the days when a PhD or MSc in biological sciences was a leisurely process planning experiments...
Students marking their own work is surprisingly common in Scotland, reports Olga Wojtas Dai Hounsell has confounded sceptics who warned him that teaching innovations had been stifled by the financial...
(Photograph) - Descent into poverty: students are facing severe hardship as delays in processing hit grant applications in Scotland and new funding arrangements play havoc with local education...
There were 1,720,094 higher education enrolments in 1995/96 with 126,582 academic staff and a sector income of Pounds 10.7 billion. * In 1995/96 31 per cent of students were under 21, with 50 per...
Getting career development skills incorporated into courses has not been easy, says Chris Phillips Today's graduates will have very different career paths from their counterparts of ten years ago....
Kam Patel talks to three under-graduates who sing the praises of an industrial placement For chemical engineer Fesil Mushtaq, a year spent in industry was a success. It proved to him that he could do...
Work experience is now vital for undergraduates, but are universities properly preparing students for the world of work? Alison Utley reports Preparing students for employment is not necessarily the...
The Institute for Learning and Teaching must abandon traditional thinking to improve lecturing in universities, says Graham Gibbs The Dearing report recommended the establishment of a national...
Why do academics continue to cling on to teaching practices that are outdated and do not work? David Jacques argues that it is time to stop believing the myths Resistance to change often comes across...
STRIKES could hit universities for the second consecutive winter as lecturers push government for an independent pay review body, writes Alan Thomson. Delegates at the Association of University...
Oxford University is taking legal advice on whether it can levy money from richer colleges to help pay for their worse-off neighbours. It is also consulting lawyers on how far charity law would stop...
Addressing the issue of college fees in his annual speech at the Senate House, Cambridge vice chancellor Alec Broers said the university needed to be increasingly self-reliant since its dependence on...
THE government routed tuition fee rebels at the Labour party conference this week after pledging to open the door to an additional higher and further education 500,000 students in the next five years...
Huw Richards reports from the fringe meetings at the Labour party conference in Brighton The University for Industry must live up to the "for industry" part of its title if it is to have a real...