University funding/finances
Funding for nursing and physiotherapy courses 'lowest of any subject in higher education'
The former Cabinet minister and diplomat will be the first black woman to lead a UK university
Compulsory redundancies ruled out until November
Future of the 400-year-old Catholic college is uncertain after decision to leave federal university in 2018
An investigation into a for-profit college by the UK’s quality watchdog has found that a fifth of students in a sample failed to show up to any classes at all, despite receiving public funding
Ulster University is to cut up to 210 jobs and lose around 1,200 student places to cope with a £8 million reduction in Northern Ireland’s higher education budget
Debate over the RAB charge is misleading. England's higher education funding system is sound and flexible, argues the former universities minister
The former universities minister discusses the reforms that reshaped higher education and his first steps into academia
This mendacious metric is dangerous for individuals and the sector, and bad news for the taxpayer, argues Philip Moriarty
Sir Steve Smith shares concerns that funding pressures could lead to university ‘hierarchy’
Former minister’s policy pamphlet outlines possible cost-saving approach
By Kellie Woodhouse, for Inside Higher Ed
England’s £9,000 fee system is “broadly fit for purpose” and “does not require wholesale reform”, but maintenance support for students should be enhanced, according to a new report
The government will not halt its planned changes to Disabled Students’ Allowances as they will “improve the levels of support overall” for students, according to Jo Johnson
The University of Cambridge has plans to establish a “LEGO professorship of play in education, development and learning” alongside a research centre, with £4 million of donations from the LEGO Foundation.
Additional support for part-time undergraduates also under consideration
International alumni outreach efforts are on the rise as institutions expand fundraising horizons
Inaugural campaign to diversify income streams kicks off with £5m donation for pioneering research centre
But new report reveals that the president was not the highest-paid person on campus at more than half of institutions
Union members at the University of Aberdeen have voted to strike in protest at the axing of 150 jobs.
Glyndwr University’s new interim vice-chancellor Graham Upton has said the troubled institution is “on course for financial stability” despite a turbulent few years.
Institution may close one of its engineering schools after a 'disappointing result' in the research excellence framework
Nicola Dandridge on the measures announced in the Queen’s Speech and their impact on the sector
The UK needs to stop using greater efficiency in research as justification for funding cuts, a vice-chancellor and ex-research council head has said.
The government should lift restrictions to allow British students to use state loans for fees abroad, the former universities minister has claimed
University leaders warn government that limiting training options could result in teacher shortages
Paul Wakeling and Adél Pásztor consider the alternatives
Paul Webley calls on the academy to follow the institution’s lead and divest from fossil fuels
The University of Oxford has announced publicly that it does not invest in oil and tar sands companies.
‘Domino theory’ points to UK academy’s future financial environment
David Bell has some words of wisdom for Jo Johnson, the new minister for universities and science, as an ‘eventful’ five years loom
The University of Oxford is on track to meet an ambitious fundraising target after hitting the £2 billion milestone
But university does not opt for full divestment from industry
Support for living costs is vital to participation, but grants that help to provide it are under threat, say Nick Hillman and Nicholas Robinson
The value of donations peaks at £807m, annual Ross/CASE survey finds, but challenges of limited outreach and elite domination persist
Which institutions are building the reserves to cushion potential shocks from uncapped student recruitment and rocketing research costs?
Soas, University of London, is to divest from fossil fuels within the next three years after the institution’s governing body today approved the decision.
Washington releases ‘secret’ document naming hundreds of institutions under scrutiny
University pension costs rose slightly last year, but may increase significantly in 2016 as major reforms take effect, according to pension experts.
A different method of funding study could allow institutions to raise fees and also save the state money, argues Alfred Morris
Did rises for vice-chancellors outpace those of academic staff, and did the REF swell the salaries of star researchers? Jack Grove rings up the benefits accrued
University leaders command huge salaries. Lincoln Allison examines how asceticism gave way to abundance
England’s universities risk being “unable to deliver the scale of investment” needed to “remain internationally competitive”.
REF-based distribution of £1.6bn research pot results in some big changes
A £120 million redevelopment of the London School of Economics has been given the green light by planners.
The case for research funding in the humanities is stronger if we recognise the similarities, argues David Eastwood
Campaigners have accused the University of Oxford of dithering over a decision on whether or not to divest from fossil fuels.
As a consultation launches, employees consider the impact of the USS reforms
The UK’s universities increased their income from overseas students once again last year, with their fee payments rising to 12.7 per cent of total income.
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
As Ed Miliband announces Labour’s policy on university tuition fees, the shadow universities minister sets out his party’s plans for higher education
Ending support for cross-border students does not mean tuition fee cash would be reinvested in institutions, report warns
Allowing some universities to charge tuition fees above £9,000 a year would “create further inequity” in higher education funding, a university group has warned
Northampton is revolutionising financing by going to the market for the money it needs to ‘future-proof’ itself, says Nick Petford
University faces £17m deficit as enrolments fall while expenditures rise
Madeleine Atkins says student opportunity funding ‘will go’ unless government can see a ‘return on investment’
Excellent teaching shouldn’t cost the earth, even in a market where price is used as a proxy for quality, argues Carl Lygo
University funding levels will remain broadly similar next year to those announced in 2014, the government’s annual grant letter has today confirmed
Alumni expected to become lifelong investors in higher education, UUK and CASE Europe conference hears
A vague policy on higher education could help the party win the next election, argues Nick Hillman