Bloody hell - is that art? Yes, says Sally Feldman, of Tracey Emin's display of her own menstrual fluids 2 June
Tara Brabazon: Just-in-case learning, just in time Education is never wasted, no matter what business leaders say, argues Tara Brabazon By Tara Brabazon 1 June
No time for short cuts Kevin Fong gives the revision lecture that his students need but don’t want 26 May
Inglorious revolution Tier 4 reforms discriminate against the private sector and give the QAA too much power, Geoffrey Alderman warns 26 May
Postgraduate pool set to dry up as feverish coalition feels the heat High student debt and higher costs will discourage applicants from further study, with disastrous consequences, argues Gareth Thomas 26 May
Oil on troubled waters Calm down Vince: Lord Browne is ready to kick-start the stuttering engine of university reform. Rob Cuthbert imagines the possibilities 26 May
Leader: Case for change yet to convince When bad news goes global and even good news is inconvenient, the government faces a huge challenge in pushing for reform By Ann Mroz 26 May
Censor sensibility By restoring cuts made to Oscar Wilde's work, we gain insights into the political forces underpinning censorship, says Nicholas Frankel 19 May
Even a divisive subject should get a hearing before being buried We must properly debate all ideas: even off-quota places have some merits, as the Australian experience showed, says Don Nutbeam 19 May
Leader: Since when is debate a bad thing? David Willetts is getting flak for voicing controversial policy ideas. But universities could suffer too if debate is stifled By Ann Mroz 19 May
Refute it thus Citation indices are poor and distorting proxies for research quality - they should get the boot, argues Thomas Docherty 19 May
Tara Brabazon: Preservation orders In a technological environment built on planned obsolescence, history matters, argues Tara Brabazon By Tara Brabazon 18 May
Insane in the membrane Felipe Fernández-Armesto can’t wait to flee the madness infecting the UK 12 May
Unsound caricature The critics are wrong, argues Rick Rylance; the AHRC is funding research into the 'Big Society', not promoting it 12 May
Here be treasure, but sector unprepared for private raiding parties The for-profits are coming, warns Matt Robb, and universities must prepare themselves for the rigours of competition before it's too late 12 May
The platinum standard Academy take note: the International Baccalaureate offers the best preparation for higher study, argue John Oakes and Anthony Seldon 12 May
Blogconfidential: Final reckoning In the last in this series, Dr Margot Feelbetter poses a dilemma and offers advice for readers to respond to online. This week: Final reckoning 5 May
Playing the long game There are pitfalls to setting up an overseas campus but the grand ideas do translate into practice, says Paul Greatrix 5 May
Time to wrest control of our pension pots from politicians' grasp As expectations of retirement income take a turn for the worse, Andrew Oswald offers a few ideas for reversing the trend 5 May
Academy unbound David Vaiani argues that the UK's universities must cast off the bonds of state finance to thrive on the global stage 5 May
By royal decree: the zombie orgy is off The royal wedding demanded a topsy-turvy carnival of sex and symbolic slaughter, says Camilla Power, but trying to exercise a human right to ritual participation landed her in jail 4 May
?galité and higher fees: French lessons for the English revolution Sciences Po shows that massive tuition-fee rises can be used to underwrite efforts to widen participation, Peter Gumbel writes 28 April
Star signs and bad omens Our willingness to end funding for 2* work bodes ill for the future of research at elites and new universities alike, says Michael Rayner 28 April
We expected much more David Willetts, advocate for the arts? Nothing like it, accuses Sally Feldman 28 April
Blogconfidential: Recipe for disaster Each week, Dr Margot Feelbetter poses a dilemma and offers advice for readers to respond to online. This week: Recipe for disaster 28 April
Producers, not consumers Peter Geoghegan lauds an HEA-funded project that aims to correct the commodification of the academic experience 28 April
Blogconfidential: I can't take the (slow) pace Each week, Dr Margot Feelbetter poses a dilemma and offers advice for readers to respond to online. This week: I can't take the (slow) pace 21 April
Be sure it's worth your while Michael Chung proposes the Einstein/Murray Rule to help researchers determine the true value of their work 21 April
Hume's diffuse effects cannot be reduced to Hefce's narrow vision The 'impact' of great work is neither immediate nor measurable by the apparatchiks: it echoes down the ages, says Simon Blackburn 21 April
Pick a book, any book Shocked by his students' great reluctance to read, Nicholas Morton sought a way to get them hooked on the habit 21 April
Tweet sensations Tim Birkhead finds a valuable lesson in the story of the bullfinch trainers 21 April
Clash of the centuries Trinity College Dublin staff follow ancient traditions in the election of their head, but one voter fears their loss as the state encroaches 14 April
Independent authority The British Academy can be proud of its steadfastly arm's-length allocation of public funds, Adam Roberts argues 14 April
Leader: It makes the world go round... But the pursuit of money can be a zero-sum game, and one nation's loss may be another's gain - as the UK could learn to its cost By Ann Mroz 14 April
Compromising higher learning, measure for reified measure The obsession with contact hours is a result of the market logic that threatens to undermine the academy, argues Thomas Docherty 14 April
Vince, you made your bed... …and when it comes to ?9,000 fees, you ought to lie in it, argues Kevin Fong 14 April
Blogconfidential: The horror, the horror... Each week, Dr Margot Feelbetter poses a dilemma and offers advice for readers to respond to online. This week: The horror, the horror... 14 April
Used and abused? External examiner James Derounian seeks respect and fair remuneration for the bastions of the appraisal system 8 April
Blogconfidential: Tinker, tailor, student, spy Each week, Dr Margot Feelbetter poses a dilemma and offers advice for readers to respond to online. This week: Tinker, tailor, student, spy 7 April
Rebels know their limits To stop the Arab Spring developing into an oppressive winter, the changemakers should read their Camus, argues Robert Zaretsky 7 April
Uncharitable thinking Who wouldn't want to help Africans avoid malaria and find sustainable work? Western aid officials, says Nick Petford 7 April
Wherefore art thou, Haldane? State plans for humanities research Peter Mandler worries that government priorities are creeping into AHRC decision-making and constraining researchers 7 April