US campus reopening plans ‘tied to politics, not public health’
In-person instruction during Covid linked to Republican states and whiter student bodies

In-person instruction during Covid linked to Republican states and whiter student bodies

Documents reveal Sage advised UK government in September that halting in-person teaching would help prevent spread of Covid-19

Many early career researchers saw their working hours fall, but one in nine scientists worked 60 hours a week, says Vitae study

Be more candid about the nature of your foreign collaborations and think about your own moral responsibilities, Australian parliamentarians warn universities

Students and academics doubt government directive will shift long-standing power dynamic

Andrew Noble says students should study locally at undergraduate level and then travel to Britain for postgraduate courses

Unrest over return of face-to-face teaching on UK campuses pushes staff-management relations to breaking point

Why assessment should not be an afterthought in the teaching process − and how to make sure it serves students as well as possible

Living in a parallel universe of perfect systems and obedient citizens could blow up in vice-chancellors’ faces like Chernobyl, warns Craig BrandistÂ

V-c says university’s in-house ‘assurance and enhancement’ led to identification and resolution of international flaws

Universities minister Michelle Donelan says outbreaks confirmed on 68 campuses

Our regular look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewersÂ

Institutions have begun cancelling diversity, equity and inclusion programmes in response to an executive order, but critics say it amounts to censorship

New code of conduct says universities should adopt procedures for confidential reporting of threats to freedom and safety as a result of international collaboration

Stanford University professors whose ideas have been used for multibillion-dollar telecoms auctions take this year’s award