Chris Havergal was appointed editor of?Times Higher Education?in March 2025. Prior to that he spent eight years as news editor. He joined?THE in 2014 as a reporter, covering areas such as?teaching and learning, access, and internationalisation.?Chris started his career as local government correspondent at the Cambridge News and holds a BA in history and an MA in medieval studies from the University of York.
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Articles by Chris Havergal 网曝门>
Three presidents have been elected to lead the National Union of Students in the devolved nations of the UK during 2015-16
A deadly attack at a Kenyan university demonstrates that higher education institutions are a “soft target” for terrorists, campaigners have said.
Sector frets over how requirement for biometric residence permit and lack of overseas English testing options may affect enrolments
UK universities must register in regions of transnational activity, lawyer advises
Head of Association of Arab Universities also urges the West not to ignore the plight of Syrian academics and students
Professor Croney, who joins Teesside from his post as deputy vice-chancellor at Northumbria University, will succeed Graham Henderson, who retires this year after 12 years at the helm.
Jean-Lou Chameau says universities must reflect the societies within which they exist
Research-intensives fear that shifts could cost them millions annually
Those who spend part of their degree overseas tend to earn more in their first job and are less likely to be unemployed six months after graduating
Institution exceeds limit on visa refusals
The UK’s top research-intensive universities should lead the way in the delivery of high-level apprenticeships which have same status as degrees
A major reorganisation of quality-related funding in Scotland will take money away from the “ancient” universities and hand it to newer institutions
The conversion of polytechnics into universities has been lamented as a “poor decision” by the business secretary
Use of online tools runs the risk of students developing problems and harming their ability to study, research finds
At THE summit in Qatar, Gulf states hear that culture of entitlement must go
Help for non-traditional learning wins support, with Greg Clark saying ‘watch this space’
Strict conditions on Glyndwr University’s licence to recruit international students are to be maintained, following a 网曝门 Office review
Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy has ruled out the introduction of tuition fees north of the border if his party wins next year’s Holyrood election
Devolved nations may face pressure to meet funding shortfall
The Association of Business Schools has released its latest ranking of periodicals, but not everyone welcomes it
How do universities cope in the aftermath of fires, earthquakes and killing sprees?
Having turned the University of Cumbria around, Upton is now heading to Wrexham
Work experience while at this Scottish institution is positively encouraged
Ending support for cross-border students does not mean tuition fee cash would be reinvested in institutions, report warns