Industry preferences of Chinese graduates changing
Legacy industries losing appeal for today's job hunters, survey finds; smaller is looking better
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Legacy industries losing appeal for today's job hunters, survey finds; smaller is looking better
Urgent action is needed to deal with the UK's digital skills crisis, warn MPs, or it risks damaging the country's productivity and competitiveness.
When a federal panel weighs whether to keep recognizing an overseer of for-profit colleges this month, the feds and the accreditor alike will be judged on the outcome.
During the time attendees have been gathered for the biennial Scholars at Risk congress, news broke that a professor from Montreal’s Concordia University has been imprisoned in Iran.
I’m not always great at predicting the future. Sure, two decades ago I believed online universities would be a thing.
A small liberal arts college on Long Island that was on the brink of closing down is close to a deal to keep its doors open.
The proportion of English undergraduates telling a major survey that their degree was poor value for money has exceeded the proportion who felt it was good value for the first time, with concerns focusing on low contact hours and delays in returning assignments.
Like in the United States, knowledge of robots will likely become an integral part of school education in China in the not-so-distant future, if some forward-thinking technology firms have their way.
Faculty members and students worry they're paying the price for construction projects amid a focus on cutting administrative costs.
A cheater in China used to have it easy: His family might be subjected to a harsh scolding, and his exam results might be thrown out. Now, a student caught cheating could face a prison sentence.