Episodios

  • Groupwork, management apprenticeships, immigration
    Mar 26 2026

    This week on the podcast an Australian politician has called on universities to scrap group assignments entirely, arguing they're unfair and cheapen degrees – but is the real problem the concept itself, or is it poorly designed groupwork that's giving collaboration a bad name?

    Plus the government axes popular management apprenticeships, and UKVI's draft proposals for rating international student sponsors go further than many expected.

    With Mark Peace, Professor of Innovation in Education at King's College London, Hugh Jones, independent consultant, and Debbie McVitty, Editor at Wonkhe and presented by Mark Leach, Editor-in-Chief at Wonkhe.

    Group essays? Pull the other one

    A blanket removal of funding for level 7 apprenticeships will damage government plans to boost infrastructure

    Amber isn’t a buffer zone in the new international RAG system – it’s a ledge

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    38 m
  • Secret life of students/AI special
    Mar 17 2026

    This week on the podcast recorded live at The Secret Life of Students, new Wonkhe research has found that nearly half of students worry their grades don't reflect what they actually know – so what does that tell us about how students are making decisions around AI use, and what does it mean for assessment in higher education?

    Plus highlights from sessions across the conference, and a tuition fees row that threatens to derail the government's Brexit reset – with the EU pushing for home fee rates for students arriving under a new youth mobility deal.

    With Helen King, Director of Learning Innovation, Development and Skills at Bath Spa University, Rosie Birch, Communities Officer at Brighton Students' Union and John Blake, Director at The Post-18 Project, and presented by Jim Dickinson, Associate Editor at Wonkhe.

    An accountability moment is what makes AI work for learning

    A tuition fees row could sink the UK’s Brexit reset

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    43 m
  • Immigration brake, social cohesion, research capital
    Mar 13 2026

    This week on the podcast the Home Office has announced an "emergency brake" on student visas from four countries, suspending all grants to applicants from Afghanistan, Cameroon, Myanmar and Sudan. What does it mean for affected students, and what happens to Chevening scholars caught in the middle?

    Plus the government's new social cohesion strategy and what it means for universities, and Research England's plans for research capital investment funding.

    With Lisa Roberts, President and Vice Chancellor at the University of Exeter, Jess Lister, Director of Education at Public First, Michael Salmon, News Editor at Wonkhe and presented by Mark Leach, Editor in Chief at Wonkhe.

    What the government’s Social Cohesion Action Plan means for universities and students

    Research Capital Investment Fund cuts ahead

    The “visa brake” details

    Student visa restrictions for four countries

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    37 m
  • Renting, TNE, disability
    Mar 5 2026

    This week on the podcast students are still struggling with the cost and quality of renting – so will the new Renters' Rights Act actually make things better, or could it leave fewer properties available?

    Plus, is transnational education a genuine strategic opportunity or just a quick fix? And the Office for Students announces a new statement of expectations on disability support.

    With Chris Husbands, Director at Higher Futures, Helena Vine, Lead Policy Officer for England at the Quality Assurance Agency, Livia Scott, Associate Editor at Wonkhe, and presented by Jim Dickinson, Associate Editor at Wonkhe.

    Students are worried about finding somewhere to live

    TNE can be successful when it’s taken on as a strategic agenda, not a quick fix

    TNE presents a quality challenge. Here’s how we solve it

    International recruitment and TNE are not a straight swap

    The international education strategy should promote quality in its TNE objectives as well as export earnings

    When TNE goes wrong, it’s students that suffer

    TNE on Wonkhe

    Preparing for disability regulation shouldn’t mean waiting for disability regulation

    Building public connection with research is about more than good communication

    OfS announces a set of expectations on disability adjustments and support

    Más Menos
    54 m
  • Student finance, graduate premium, mental health
    Feb 26 2026

    This week on the podcast the government has struggled to defend its position on Plan 2 student loans in a Westminster Hall debate as opposition parties offer competing sticking plasters – but can any of the proposals survive contact with the maths, and is a proper funding review now inevitable?

    Plus there’s cross-national evidence that suggests Britain's shrinking graduate premium is a demand-side problem that cutting courses won't fix, and a new study that finds student mental health services are bigger than ever but the students who need them most can't afford to reach them.

    With Mary Curnock Cook CBE, independent educationalist and former Chief Executive of UCAS, Martin Priestley, Head of Education at Mills and Reeve, David Kernohan, Associate Editor at Wonkhe and presented by Mark Leach, Editor in Chief at Wonkhe.

    If the graduate premium is falling, supply-side tinkering won’t bring it back.

    Student loan reform is coming. But not without a proper review.

    The support paradox is a poverty problem.

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    36 m
  • Student group claim, PRES, high streets
    Feb 19 2026

    This week on the podcast UCL has settled with the Student Group Claim over pandemic-era teaching disruptions – but with 36 more universities now facing legal action from over 170,000 potential claimants, what does this mean for the sector?

    Plus the Postgraduate Research Experience Survey (PRES) results are out, and we discuss the potential role of universities in arresting the decline of the high street.

    With Rachel Brooks, Professor of Higher Education at University of Oxford, James Dunphy, Chief Executive at Committee of University Chairs, James Coe, Associate Editor at Wonkhe, and presented by Jim Dickinson, Associate Editor at Wonkhe.

    Who calls the shots when resolving students’ complaints?

    The student group claim settles out of court

    Postgraduate Research Experience Survey, 2025

    Universities have a responsibility for the high street too

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    52 m
  • MI5, Labour, free speech
    Feb 12 2026

    This week on the podcast MI5 has warned universities that UK higher education has become a "prime target for foreign states and hostile actors" – so what are the risks and how should the sector respond to growing concerns about security and defence?

    Plus what a potential Labour leadership change could mean for higher education, and Reform's threat to withhold funding from Welsh universities over free speech.

    With Paul Kett, Group CEO and Vice Chancellor at London South Bank University, Ben Vulliamy, Executive Director at the Association of Heads of University Administration, Debbie McVitty, Editor at Wonkhe and presented by Mark Leach, Editor-in-Chief at Wonkhe.

    Intelligence agencies provide briefings on foreign interference

    Jacqui Smith’s secret service

    Was there a freedom of speech breach at Bangor?

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    47 m
  • Student loans, research funding, Wales
    Feb 5 2026

    This week on the podcast student finance has exploded into the headlines – but is the English student loan system really doomed? Backbench Labour MPs are pressing the chancellor to act, polling has revealed widespread antipathy for above-inflation interest rates, and Rachel Reeves has clashed with Martin Lewis over the freeze to repayment thresholds.

    Now former OfS access tsar John Blake has launched The Post-18 Project, our Wonkhe think tank, by arguing that a review of higher education funding is unavoidable and that a graduate tax should be one of the options. So is the government going to act, or will it be bounced into action?

    Plus UKRI has found itself in a perfect comms storm over the future of curiosity-driven research funding, and Michael Salmon sits down with Welsh minister Vikki Howells to discuss the challenges facing tertiary education.

    With Ben Ward, CEO at University of Manchester Students' Union, Smita Jamdar, Partner and Head of Education at Shakespeare Martineau, Michael Salmon, News Editor at Wonkhe, Vikki Howells, Minister for Further and Higher Education in the Senedd and presented by Jim Dickinson, Associate Editor at Wonkhe.

    The Post-18 Project: A review of higher education funding is inevitable

    Five challenges faced by the Welsh tertiary sector

    Maybe a graduate tax wasn’t such a bad idea after all

    Welsh higher education is running out of wriggle room

    Wales refuses to implement Westminster’s stealth graduate tax raid

    Who should pay for our failing student loan system?

    Más Menos
    52 m