Campus free speech remains in peril in America, despite university reforms
A growing number of US students support violent protest to stop a controversial campus speech from going ahead, according to a new survey.
A growing number of US students support violent protest to stop a controversial campus speech from going ahead, according to a new survey.
This week’s letters discuss fixes for Britain’s university sector, a rebrand for Just Stop Oil and the history of paid holiday in Britain.
Our university sector certainly isn’t short of useless courses. But is it really the place of the government to say which subjects people can and cannot study?
Marking boycotts, strikes and Covid have disrupted degrees and left a generation of young people dissatisfied.
I graduate today. And as the country has its farcical reckoning with lockdowns through the Covid inquiry, it’s hard not to feel like the class of ‘23 was uniquely swindled.
The situation at the University of East Anglia has reached a strange nadir as unions and bosses clash.
As teenagers up and down the country celebrate and commiserate their A-level results, the number of students missing out on a university place has hit the highest level in a decade.
The course, which blends rigorous analysis with creativity, is being tarred with the same brush as actual “Mickey Mouse” courses.
An alarming new study reveals cancel culture to be far more popular on campus than six years ago.
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