Such talk replaces pride of place with &know your place*. But if you want to see levelling up made flesh, come and meet our graduates, says John Raftery
Improving benefits and lowering contributions must not mitigate against the pension scheme*s ability to better ride out future storms, says Kate Barker
The biggest step backwards over the last 50 years was supporters* retreat from equal opportunity to a focus on ill-defined &diversity*, says Harvey Graff
Use of the CSAT is likely to increase US enrolment of South Koreans but could bode ill for some of the latter*s domestic institutions, says Kyuseok Kim
ChatGPT*s ability to churn out mediocre papers should lead us to reappraise how research is carried out, reported and evaluated, says Martyn Hammersley
The country*s National Education Policy aims to build a quality internationalised and marketised sector. But, says Saumen Chattopadhyay, it faces many entrenched challenges
Tsinghua vice-president Bin Yang outlines how the nation*s rapid digital development is evolving to boost the quality and accessibility of education and to give the world a window on China
The route will ease the staffing crisis by widening access, but apprentices will have to pass the same professional exams as everyone else, says Nichola Hay
Ministers* metric-based boasts about the country*s scientific prowess are belied by the reality, as a recent incident illustrates, says Roohola Ramezani
With a UK general election potentially less than a year away, there is no better time for academics to influence political thinking, says ex-MP Natascha Engel
Aligning Kurdistan*s higher education system with European norms has given hope to Iraq*s students, but international help is still needed, say Aram Mohamad Qadir and Amanj Saeed
With just 50 sub-Saharan journals listed in Scopus, it*s time to consider how citation indexes are holding back scholarly publishing in Africa, argue David Mills and Natasha Robinson