The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20060103075352/http://education.independent.co.uk:80/higher/

Higher Education

Andrew Oswald: Why our scientists aren't winning Nobels

Published: 15 December 2005

There are more British accents at the Nobel Prize ceremonies than one would guess from the paperwork. In 2003, we won Nobel Prizes in three separate fields. Unfortunately, there is a good reason why no one noticed: two of the three had worked for decades in the United States.

Third World universities

Published: 15 December 2005

Finally, the West is waking up to the importance of investing in Third World universities that for decades have been starved of cash. Lucy Hodges reports on Britain's efforts to improve higher education across the continent

Leading article: African ambition

Published: 15 December 2005

All the signs are indicating that the World Bank is shifting its position on investing in higher education in developing countries (see page 7). It had put the emphasis on primary education, arguing that it is the most important pre-condition for development. But the experts are realising the necessity to invest, too, in higher education, to enable African countries to catch up technologically with the West. Which is why Bill Rammell, the higher education minister, has put money into setting up an Africa unit at the Association of Commonwealth Universities to help British universities establish links with their counterparts in Africa. This is vital if African universities are to improve.

Campaigns from the campus

Published: 08 December 2005

Global issues are spurring students into action. But, says Tim Walker, local protests have most effect

Leading article: Rights of reform

Published: 08 December 2005

Next week, Cambridge University will announce the results of a ballot that has been taking place into whether it should reform intellectual property rights. This is turning into quite a hot potato. At the moment, dons doing research that is externally funded can pocket the proceeds of any discoveries that they may make. We believe that the university is right to try to change that situation.

Leading article: Ring the changes

Published: 01 December 2005

The desire of Lord Broers, Cambridge University's former vice-chancellor, to see broader undergraduate degrees in the UK met with approval last week at the Higher Education Policy Institute annual lecture. The education consultant Quentin Thompson suggested that universities broaden their courses themselves. It would make studying for a degree more appealing to potential students. The big question is how to secure change. Vice-chancellors find it difficult enough to secure the reforms they seek. Perhaps the answer is for the Higher Education Funding Council to attach money to change. Then it might start to happen.

Let the bursary battle begin...

Published: 01 December 2005

With top-up fees, Britain is seeing the beginning of a market in student bursaries, says Dick Davison

Go to jail - then get a degree

Published: 01 December 2005

A project to help prisoners into higher education is turning lives around, reports

Degree classification: Have the Desmond and Vorderman had their day?

Published: 24 November 2005

Universities are planning to get rid of degree classifications including the 2:2 and the Third and introduce a transcript listing students' achievements. But the big employers are against the idea. Nick Jackson reports

Top-up fees: they won't be as bad as you think

Published: 24 November 2005

The controversial new finance regime comes into force next autumn. Critics fear it will deter people from going to university. But Hilary Wilce suggests it should do nothing of the sort - and poorer students will be better off

New universities tempt students with bursaries and scholarships

Published: 24 November 2005

If you fancy a gamble, why not apply to Middlesex University, where you could end up winning £30,000? Harriet Swain reports

Leading article: No change suits the universities

Published: 24 November 2005

The universities are intent on skewering carefully laid plans to reform the UK's arcane system for admission to higher education. The umbrella group, the Universities UK, is in favour of change; so is UCAS, the admissions body. A report by Steve Schwartz, vice-chancellor of Brunel University, on university admissions argued that it made no sense to decide on applicants through predicted rather than actual grades at A-level. No other country in the world does it. But it is the way it is done here - and the universities seem determined to fight change. Why?

Old universities: Big prizes for the poorest

Published: 24 November 2005

All pre-1992 institutions will charge fees of £3,000. But their bursaries vary

Leading article: Degrees of value

Published: 17 November 2005

Should universities offer undergraduates a broader and more structured curriculum on the American model instead of leaving them to sink or swim with a specialist degree and little support? This question will be asked increasingly as students pay ever larger amounts in fees and wonder whether they are getting value for their outlay. The medieval view of higher education as a community of scholars still persists in some older institutions. That philosophy worked - just about - when classes were small. But now that lectures are so big and students reduced to a number, there are very real concerns about whether humanities degrees are giving young people a useful and rewarding education.

Arts degrees: Too much time - and too little to do

Published: 17 November 2005

Humanities undergraduates are wasting their university lives drinking in pubs and watching television, say critics. Has the time come to reform the arts degree? Lucy Hodges reports

Pick of the student papers

Published: 17 November 2005

Drink cola before your sea dip

Howard Davies: Any excuse for a party. Even league tables...

Published: 10 November 2005

It has been a busy few days on the campus, as we like to call our warren off the Aldwych. What with parties to mark the end of Ramadan and the great Diwali celebrations there's been little time for work. The South Americans got in on the act, too, with "Latino Hallowe'en", and the ANZ society have been celebrating Rugby League wins as a warm-up for the forecast All Black-wash this winter.

Can Oxford University attract more black students?

Published: 10 November 2005

Nick Jackson reports on the efforts it is making to overcome its elitist image

Leading article: Oxford revisited

Published: 10 November 2005

It is good news if Professor John Hood, Oxford's vice-chancellor, is winning support now for his revised governance reforms. We were lobbied last week by a number of dons who were opposed to his second Green Paper. We thought things looked bad for him in the discussion at Congregation, so we concluded with a prayer that the rebels' solution to Oxford's problems would work. But, if Oxford's lecturers and tutors really are coming round to Hood's sensible compromise (a ruling body of seven outsiders, seven insiders and Lord Patten as chairman) the university has a chance to reshape itself for the 21st century.

Leading article: The battle for Oxford continues

Published: 03 November 2005

On Tuesday, Oxford dons had "a discussion" about the second lot of proposals put forward by their vice-chancellor for reform of the way the university runs itself. The first Green Paper on governance had been rejected in a crushing defeat for John Hood. The second is a complete rewrite: instead of the plan for a board of trustees made up completely of outsiders, this body will now be composed of seven internal and seven external members plus a chairman, the chancellor, Lord Patten.

Why does training some doctors cost three times as much as others?

Published: 03 November 2005

A report published today into the funding of medical education in Britain suggests that taxpayers are getting poor value. Lucy Hodges reports

Education Quandary

Published: 03 November 2005

Our son wants to study design in Holland. As an EU student, can he get financial help?

Brenda Gourley: We must all engage with the community

Published: 01 November 2005

We have often witnessed the extraordinary efforts of people rallying to the aid of victims of natural disasters such as the Asian tsunami and the recent earthquake in South Asia. Civic engagement remains an essential and important part of life. As caught up as we all get in our daily lives, we still find the time to do something for the greater good. But is it enough to act on this sense of civic responsibility only during major disasters and let our commitment to society hibernate the rest of the time? We need to make civic engagement the norm, not the exception.

David Attenborough zooms in on life's little troopers

Published: 01 November 2005

David Attenborough talks to John Windell about his new series, 'Life in the Undergrowth', and how the smallest creatures keep the planet alive

Get to know the force which is helping to shape the world

Published: 01 November 2005

Despite its pioneering research background in popular culture, the OU has never offered a media studies course. But this is set to change from next February when a batch of OU students starts work on a new course, Understanding Media.

page 1 of 10 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | Next

Editor's Choice

The no-diet diet

Forget willpower. How to lose weight without eating less

The iceman cometh

Mike Horn heads for the N. Pole on an incredible mission

Poperatunity

After ENO's Gaddafi opera - hijacking the highbrow

Johann Hari Independent Porfolio Content

To Hollywood, gays must be tragic or sissy

Portsmouth benefactor

Mysterious origin of Gaydamak's £465m

Tourism by numbers

How to rate perfect beach

Professionals' share picks

46% gain in vintage year

Sweeney Todd

Fact or fiction?

Day in a page


Find articles published on: