US universities should follow UK in promoting students’ ‘soft skills’ Universities must understand what employers want from graduates, argues Kevin Kruger 16 March
9 reasons to be cheerful about your pension Economist Andrew Oswald counsels against despair over the Universities Superannuation Scheme reforms 15 March
#HEhustings: Tories, Labour, Lib Dems show off their party lines The UK sector gathers to hear and debate the major parties’ poll positions on higher education By Chris Parr 12 March
Strong ties are best defence University terror inquiries flag the vital role of strong pastoral care and good tutoring in guarding against disengagement By John Gill 12 March
Unhappy with your thesis mark? A day in court may get you nowhere A legal battle in Germany over a contentious dissertation on Martin Luther and anti-Semitism raises key questions about academic decisions 12 March
When lecturers’ professional and private lives collide For teachers, the border between the two is porous, says Shahidha Bari 12 March
Is academic judgement now open to legal challenge? A claim of academic immunity is not the trump card it was, say David Lawson and Leon Glenister 12 March
Mental illness: shedding light on the darkness Be open about your health, an academic advises. It could be the surest way to get the workplace support you need 12 March
Universal case studies would lighten the REF load Dominic Dean has a plan to make future assessment exercises easier, quicker and better By Dominic Dean 12 March
Has China’s maverick SUSTC broken away, or been broken? South University of Science and Technology of China wanted to buck the system. Did it succeed? asks Hong Bing 5 March
Tales from the precariat: when ‘enough’s enough’ A physicist on the ‘shameless exploitation’ of low-pay sessional lecturing that leaves his family officially classed as ‘poor’ By Chris Parr 5 March
Danny Dorling on £6K fees: the 1% won’t feel a thing Labour’s proposal to cut tuition fees will be funded by removing a perk from the UK’s super-rich, writes the professor of geography 5 March
English literature’s heresy wars Creative writing, often seen as a heretical branch of English studies, is split into sects. But such schisms are no sin, says Jonathan Taylor 5 March
From the cradle to the ballot Labour has given birth to its £6K tuition fees baby but doubts still remain about the costs and benefits of the policy By John Gill 5 March
Exams: call time on the academy’s Hunger Games University examinations teach students how to compete but teamwork is the vital life skill, says Kevin Fong 5 March
V-c-governor relationships make the stage Judith Ackroyd and Jill Robinson explain why they are dramatising material from confidential interviews with university leaders 5 March
Liam Byrne: Why fees should be £6K As Ed Miliband announces Labour’s policy on university tuition fees, the shadow universities minister sets out his party’s plans for higher education By Liam Byrne 27 February
Owning up to the bias in all of us We need an honest conversation about unconscious prejudices and how they can hold back individuals and their work By John Gill 26 February
Save field biology skills from extinction risk John Warren and colleagues warn of the serious decline in graduates with sound identification skills 26 February
Seven myths of university teaching Paul Ashwin unpicks some cherished nostrums, from Hollywood-style star turns at the podium to the much-exaggerated death of the lecture By Paul Ashwin 26 February
Why Offa is setting admissions targets for high tariff universities Les Ebdon explains the thinking behind a new strategic aim for the Office for Fair Access 26 February
The ABC of tolerance and the ‘alphabet community’ Universities have a vital role to play in recognising complex sexualities, says Deborah D. Rogers 26 February
Do you need an emotional well-being check? Discussions and activities on University Mental Health Day By Chris Parr 26 February
Anthropology’s A level does not deserve the axe The AQA decision to end a promising trial of the subject does a disservice to students, the discipline and the UK, says Joy Hendry 26 February
Genius is so last season Deifying young fashion designers does them no favours and slights the many who make their work possible, says Sally Feldman By Sally Feldman 26 February
The indie-disco guide to student fees and engagement Nick Hillman’s knowing nod to punk in a Hepi report prompted a flurry of rock’n’roll quips on Twitter By Chris Parr 19 February
Bond plan will shake university funding world Northampton is revolutionising financing by going to the market for the money it needs to ‘future-proof’ itself, says Nick Petford 19 February
Shut the front door! Fear of offending makes a pig’s ear of free speech, says Christopher Bigsby 19 February
University rankings: made-to-measure metrics to suit local fashions A summit in Qatar is a chance to determine the meaning of excellence in the Middle East and North Africa, says Cesar Wazen By Cesar Wazen 19 February
No shades of grey in teaching relationships Academics should be banned from damaging sexual liaisons with students, postgraduates in particular, argues Luke Brunning By Luke Brunning 19 February
Don’t let others ruin your name The use of recruitment agents is rising, but are universities putting their reputations at risk as competition hots up? 19 February
Isis shows ‘Oriental studies’ are essential The University of Manchester could not have chosen a worse time to consider closing Middle Eastern language courses, writes Hugh Williamson 19 February
Blog: Lessons for Limpopo A project at the University of Warwick is aiming to tackle huge challenges crippling South African schools, writes Laura Jackson 18 February
Like it’s going out of fashion Institutions splashed the cash to stay competitive, resulting in a REF price tag that may be far higher than the official estimate By John Gill 12 February
Soldiers of the NFL American football is a contemporary moral equivalent of war, says Alan Ryan 12 February
Universities find it difficult to grasp China’s dream Has the Chinese government’s sophisticated message to its higher education sector come at the cost of clarity? asks Mike Gow 12 February
Which? decries ‘unlawful’ terms in small print A report on university course changes by the consumer watchdog caused a stir this week By Chris Parr 12 February
Teacher training: a missed opportunity Their lack of protest over reforms means that universities have lost the chance to transform the sector, laments Anthony Kelly 12 February
At risk: higher education’s electronic brain The UK university sector’s digital network is unique in the world. It’s not just cost-efficient for subscribers but priceless, says Martin Hall 12 February
Research: the wrong priority for the arts and humanities? Public funding in these subjects would be better spent on teaching, argues David Oldfield 12 February
Blog: On Israel, universities are becoming discussion-free zones Attempts to shut down debate highlight a worrying trend on UK campuses, writes Yiftah Curiel 10 February
Blog: Where Malala leads, the rest should follow Liz Marr on the role social partnerships can play in extending educational opportunities and giving adult learners a ‘second chance’ 9 February
Measure still for measure? Is the sector placing too little trust in academics and too much in performance management techniques? By John Gill 5 February
Students are right to ask where their fees go Excellent teaching shouldn’t cost the earth, even in a market where price is used as a proxy for quality, argues Carl Lygo 5 February
Felipe Fernández-Armesto: Parlez-vous Anglais? Foreign flavours enrich the English tongue, says Felipe Fernández-Armesto 5 February
Must we sell our souls to make a bigger impact? Efforts to trumpet the value of social science can misrepresent important controversies and subtleties, says Martyn Hammersley 5 February
Everyday successes are important, too Academics’ tendency to feel they have not ‘done enough’ needs to be tempered by an appreciation of colleagues’ achievements By Harriet Line 5 February