Esteemed doctor and academic John Dwyer has been tapped to head the proposed Murray Darling Medical School, but not everyone’s pleased about it. The idea for the school, a collaboration between Charles Sturt and La Trobe universities, has been percolating for ...
More »Australian Academy of Science requests $100m for agricultural research
When an ex-Australian Coal Association chairman is afraid of climate change, you know you should be especially so. In Ian Dunlop’s report, Disaster Alley: Climate Change, Conflict & Risk, he argues our political and corporate leaders have failed Australia and, ...
More »MIT picks QUT for entrepreneur bootcamp, again
If you have an innovative idea and a spare US $6000, or are lucky enough to get a scholarship, MIT wants you. For the second consecutive year, the world’s top-ranked university has chosen QUT as the host of its Global ...
More »Deakin Uni conference gives ex-cons a voice
They’ve done their time. Now, they’ll have the mic. Three out of the four keynote speakers at Deakin University’s Reintegration Puzzle Conference are ex-prisoners. Held in Sydney 21-23 June 2017, it is fittingly themed, Changing Systems from the Inside Out. Professor Joe ...
More »Profile: Discovering the oceans’ secrets with UTAS paleoceanographist Zanna Chase
This is Campus Review's Profile series, in which we visit with an academic or researcher to learn more about them and their work. Zanna Chase has come to Tasmania from Canada, via New York, do learn more about the world's ...
More »Links between universities and industry patently fine: report
Despite ugly-looking past figures and rumours that these numbers persist, universities and industry are collaborating just fine. Such is the finding of a report by government body IP Australia. Based on numbers of jointly filed IP applications in 2016, the ...
More »World-first Deakin study unmasks university ghostwriters
In a world first study, Deakin University researchers have showed markers can distinguish ghostwritten assignments from genuine ones. Their hit rate for identifying ghostwritten papers, however, was only 62 per cent. Seven academics each blind-marked 20 psychology papers, six of ...
More »Policy changes unfair to regional universities
The HESLA Bill has the potential to damage regional universities and the communities that depend on them, and RUN will not support it. On one hand, the federal government is delivering policy to assist regional Australia, its students, universities and ...
More »In the dragon’s grip
Should we be concerned about China’s soft power approach to higher education? It seems that every week brings a new story about China’s expansion into global higher education. Having completely transformed its national system in a generation, China is increasingly ...
More »Billion dollar babies: the cost of not furthering education
The following does not contain typos: disengaged 24-year-olds cost taxpayers $69 billion over a lifetime. This is one of the major findings of the Mitchell Institute’s new report, Counting the costs of lost opportunity in Australian education. The Institute, based ...
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