Opinion

Demands that scholars like David Starkey not speak outside their subject threaten intellectual freedom, Frank Furedi says

1 September

Academics should back a case-study approach to impact in the REF or risk getting far worse, says Claire Donovan

25 August

Dennis Tourish passes judgement on a system that invariably fails to give a clear picture of how well people are doing their jobs

25 August

David Starkey's comment that Jamaican patois drove last week's riots reveal a shockingly profound ignorance, argues Geoffrey K. Pullum

18 August

Mark Burnley is baffled by the decision not to tell academics how their work has been scored. How will improvement ever be possible?

11 August

Is the Times Higher Education ‘exam howlers’ competition a bit of harmless fun, or unfair and offensive? Katie Alcock believes the joke is on teachers as well as their students and no one is any the worse for it, but Alice Bell finds little to smile about

11 August

Cutting-edge researchers aren’t necessarily the best teachers, argues Alan Ryan

11 August

The EPSRC's funding shift from investigator-driven work to application-driven R&D is misguided, says Philip Moriarty

4 August

Technology is, of course, an aid to education, says Frank Webster, but we must teach students how to evaluate and filter information

4 August

We must listen to the Continent’s sounds and sweet airs, says Malcolm Gillies

28 July

The AAB plans could limit choice, narrow participation and damage the UK's reputation, Christopher Snowden argues

28 July

Criticism of graduate nursing is an evidence-free zone, Roger Watson argues: mastering the job requires academic ability as well as skill

28 July

Partnerships between public and private institutions are key to weathering these uncertain times, says James Kirkbride

21 July

The Australian 'education revolution' is making progress, although there are still challenges to be overcome, writes Peter Coaldrake

21 July

Simon Marginson on an Australian seminar that considered the local implications of the 'English experiment' with humanities funding

14 July

Higher fees will lead to greater student indebtedness, so we need new ways to 'sell' this fact, argues Kathryn Jones

14 July

Sally Feldman hails the e-book’s rise - but many won’t abandon the paper trail

14 July

The government's access proposals are contradictory and timid - they should be bolder, declares Graeme Atherton

7 July

We should not be so dismissive of back-office staff, for not only are they vital to the academy, they are human, Paul Greatrix says

7 July

Don't be put off by the Commission on a Bill of Rights, say Colin Harvey and Colm O'Cinneide - we must engage with it

30 June

The White Paper lacks vision: the coalition's short-termism must give way to long-term thinking, Libby Hackett says

30 June

Alan Ryan considers whether traditional university education has run its race

30 June