The prizes for presence demean those engaged in scholarly endeavour Frank Furedi says there is no academic or pedagogic merit in awarding marks to students simply because they've shown up 10 September
Daytime TV: All the lonely people Gary Day is moved by a film about those who die alone, and finds Miss Marple surprisingly alluring 10 September
Leader: Just who are you here for? Education suffers because teaching gets no respect. That must change, and academics can start with themselves By Ann Mroz 10 September
Tara Brabazon: Forget the Spanx, leaders of tomorrow The next generation to shape academia must eschew quick-fix shortcuts and generously nurture talent without envy, says Tara Brabazon By Tara Brabazon 9 September
Planes, trains and carbon Academics should take the lead when it comes to cutting aviation-related carbon, say Jens Rolff and David Sedley 3 September
Shakespeare and porn: a topic for theoretical, not practical, analysis Being a badly dressed academic is nothing to be ashamed of, says Peter J. Smith. An undressed professor, however, is a step too far 3 September
Daytime TV: Enduring love Alain Badiou can't get a word in, but Emily Bronte's doomed lovers speak volumes, says Gary Day 3 September
Leader: Autonomy can be an illusion US academics may face less red tape than those in the UK, but they must also appease students, whose opinions can halt careers By Ann Mroz 3 September
Don't go on the defensive Alan Ryan ponders why institutions are so uptight about freedom of information 3 September
Tweet yourself to a new circle Twitter is not for exchanging trivia. Rather, as Russell Stannard has recently learnt, it’s a powerful networking tool for academics and institutions 1 September
Leader: We must adapt to survive Students no longer have to travel to get a Western degree as UK education centres are setting up overseas in a global market By Ann Mroz 27 August
Study leave: a right, not a privilege Tim Birkhead dreams of time to work, free from day-to-day interruptions 27 August
Beyond the here and now Dianne Berry says the HE framework must account for the future potential of universities, not just their current work 27 August
Business could be just what we need to cut through the red tape Jon F. Baldwin argues that incorporating universities into BIS may lead to a recognition of the real export value of the sector 27 August
Daytime TV: Moved to action A documentary about benefits makes Gary Day uncomfortable. Thank goodness for Timothy Spall 27 August
Tara Brabazon: Academics must wise up to Web 2.0 marketing – and the answer is high-quality podcasts iPod broadcasts provide the best way for universities to present and strengthen their brand to would-be students and the public; the message must be to use the beat of popular culture to convey a serious message By Tara Brabazon 26 August
A study in anarchy Universities must do right by students, but if Donald Short's experience is anything to go by, they are falling well short 20 August
Dummies' guides to teaching insult our intelligence A wall of silence surrounds pedagogic courses for new lecturers that are manifestly unfit for purpose, says Joao Magueijo 20 August
Seeker after truth God may be in the detail, says Gary Day, but asking religious leaders to prove it leads only to perplexity 20 August
Gloria Monday: Don’t look now… If you want to stay abreast of what’s happening in the holidays, Gloria Monday’s advice is not to leave the building 17 August
Make parity a priority With the right will and effort, teaching can become the equal of research in promotion terms, says Paul Ramsden 13 August
Short-term goals will damage our long-term health and strength Universities can do more for economic recovery if they're not hemmed in by the need to deliver quick political fixes, argues David Chiddick 13 August
Daytime TV: Disorderly conduct Teenage girls turning to crime should be no surprise when we look at society as a whole, says Gary Day 13 August
Leader: I'm afraid it's very bad news The prescription for a higher education sector suffering self-inflicted wounds, a fiscal bruising and hysteria is a rather bitter pill By Ann Mroz 13 August
Don't celebrate yet, girls There's always a backlash against women's successes, warns Sally Feldman 13 August
Tara Brabazon: Vive la différence Rather than treating visiting international students as cash cows or with suspicion, we should value the vital diversity they bring to education 12 August
IUSS reaction: undergraduate education has changed, let’s accept it and move on The question is not whether standards have fallen but rather whether we have the right standards for what we are trying to achieve, says Bob Brecher 10 August
Burn down the straw man Mistrust of 'business' is misplaced: treated with respect, it can help to create knowledge, explains David Docherty 6 August
Stuck on the sidelines David Gauntlett says the AHRC needs to put its researchers back on the field and stop positioning them as mere spectators of culture 6 August
Leader: Standards issue can't be evaded That v-cs cannot admit to even understanding MPs' worries about quality and consistency bodes ill for the UK's reputation By Ann Mroz 6 August
There's no need to be charitable over external governor appointments The widely held assumption that university councils must have a majority of external members is incorrect, writes Nicholas Bamforth 6 August
We'll be all right (probably) Let's stop panicking and let the swine flu experts do their job, says Kevin Fong 6 August
IUSS reaction: ‘Quality control’ is the problem, not the solution More of the same won’t allow us to reform the British system effectively, writes Florian Bieber 3 August
IUSS reaction: Right questions, wrong answer QAA chief Peter Williams gives his verdict on the IUSS report 2 August
Tara Brabazon: The hare or the tortoise? We live in a society where speed of communication rules, but Tara Brabazon asks if fast is necessarily better, particularly when it comes to learning By Tara Brabazon 31 July
Wanted: free dogsbodies Unpaid internships not only negate widening-access efforts, they devalue jobs and graduates, says Amy Binns 30 July
Leader: Shared scholarly passions Who'd marry a single-minded, career-focused academic? Other academics, it seems. But such a relationship can have downsides By Ann Mroz 30 July
Let's relax about fairness This talk of social mobility is a poor form of radicalism, says Alan Ryan 30 July
Total disclosure a sign of the academy's time-and-motion sickness Thomas Docherty examines the transparency culture, its political uses and the dangerous implications for scholarly freedom 30 July
Experience is not enough Stefano Harney argues that as long as business schools are overawed by real-world success, they will not offer the insights industry needs 30 July
Gather insight by the book Journal articles are important, but writing books is the sine qua non of deeper understanding, says Richard Rose 23 July
The future's bright for universities ... if they reinvent themselves Mike Boxall argues that we must forget the certainties of the past if we are to make the most of the opportunities of the future 23 July
Can't buy you love Gary Day is disturbed by a dramatisation of the financial crisis and a portrayal of society's decline 23 July
Leader: It's about what you're about It's easy to mock branding, but the vital job it does in telling the world what a university does and why it matters is priceless By Ann Mroz 23 July
Gloria Monday: ‘Leave’ me out of it Gloria Monday on business-speak, unpronounceable graduands and the human face of administration 20 July
Teach them how to think Kevin Sharpe says pedagogy should be measured not in contact hours but by its success in shaping critical minds 16 July
Pursuit of knowledge is being hamstrung by heavy-handed editing Richard Bateman argues that science publishing is sacrificing innovation and creativity on the altar of uniformity 16 July
Daytime TV: Seeking Paradise Gary Day on getting a good education, playing doctors and nurses, and the thirst for danger 16 July
Leader: Straight back down to Earth The Moon landings inspired a generation of scientists, but a cash-strapped UK is unlikely to explore the final frontier By Phil Baty 16 July