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Articles by Jack Grove 网曝门>
A medical student who twice failed his final-year exams has lost a legal battle against the decision not to award him a degree.
Research misconduct is “alive and well” at UK universities, the British Medical Journal has claimed.
V-c forecasts sunshine for a leaner, more fiscally sound University of West London. Jack Grove writes
More than 50 graduates are chasing every job offered by some of Britain’s top employers, new research suggests.
A professor of pharmacology has been named as the new head of Brunel University.
Local outreach initiatives forge ahead after 'absurd' closure of national programme. Jack Grove writes
London Metropolitan University is set to cut its administration costs by up to 50 per cent by sharing services with other institutions, bringing "some staff losses and some staff gains".
But undergraduates' confidence in their abilities isn't echoed by employers, as Jack Grove reports
Axed scheme had a wider reach than it was given credit for, attests academic. Jack Grove writes
British universities can learn lessons from the admissions reforms used in South Africa to recruit promising black students, a vice-chancellor has argued.
University applications by UK students are running 7.6 per cent below last year’s levels, the latest figures show.
Students at King’s College, Cambridge, spent so much time on protests challenging the higher education reforms that they neglected their studies, according to its provost.
Brazil has announced a second round of applications for a ?1.3 billion study-abroad scheme that could result in thousands of students coming to UK universities.
Advice designed to allay fears about graduate debt may actually deter many students from applying, an expert on university access has claimed.
David Willetts has expressed his "frustration" that the Browne Review did not address postgraduate funding, despite his own government's failure to resolve the issue.
Million+ worried by Willetts' failure to allay fears over widening-participation funds. Jack Grove writes
The National Union of Students president has backed proposals for a European Union loan system for master's students studying abroad.
Sixty per cent of leading public figures in the UK have humanities, social science or arts degrees, a new study has found.
The egalitarian bent of Dutch society has been reflected in its higher education sector - until now. Jack Grove discovers that government and global forces are spurring some institutions to try to become 'tall poppies'
Universities charging lower tuition fees may be held to more rigorous standards than those levying ?9,000 a year, a professor of higher education policy has warned.
President of top institution fears funding doldrums as student numbers skyrocket. Jack Grove reports