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Good Presentation Skills Benefit Careers - and Science

Good Presentation Skills Benefit Careers - and Science

Despite many competing demands, there are compelling reasons for researchers to prioritize developing the skills that will improve their presentations.

How Higher Education Needs to Fit into Lifelong Learning

How Higher Education Needs to Fit into Lifelong Learning

Graeme Atherton, Director of the National Education Opportunities Network (NEON), University of West London and Gordon Marsden, Shadow Minister for Higher and Further Education and Skills from 2015 to 2019. You can find Graeme and Gordon on Twitter @NEONHE @GordonMarsden. Lighter days, brighter COVID statistics and the tremendous NHS achievement of mass vaccination across the […]

The 60-Year-Old Scientific Screwup That Helped Covid Kill

The 60-Year-Old Scientific Screwup That Helped Covid Kill

All pandemic long, scientists brawled over how the virus spreads. Droplets! No, aerosols! At the heart of the fight was a teensy error with huge consequences.

The Next Wave

The dictate of 'systemic importance' is being used to purge all forms of culture resistant to marketization. A newly strengthened alliance between the cultural sector and civil society has emerged in response. But an anti-democratic backlash is also gaining ground, not least from within culture itself.

The REF's Singular Focus on Excellence Limits Academic Diversity

The REF's Singular Focus on Excellence Limits Academic Diversity

Research assessment exercises in the UK ostensibly serve to evaluate research, but they also shape and manage it. The author argues that the REF promotes a narrow vision and calls for a wider distribution of research funding to prevent fields being captured by dominant academic cultures.

Why Hybrid Journals Do Not Lead to Full and Immediate Open Access

Why Hybrid Journals Do Not Lead to Full and Immediate Open Access

6 arguments are presented that articulate why cOAlition S organisations will not financially support the hybrid model of publishing.

How Universities Have Betrayed Reason and Humanity-And What's to Be Done About It

How Universities Have Betrayed Reason and Humanity-And What's to Be Done About It

We urgently need to create a high-profile campaign devoted to transforming universities in the way required so that humanity may learn how to make social progress toward a better, wiser, more civilized, enlightened world.

The 'Capitalism is Broken' Economy

The 'Capitalism is Broken' Economy

This is the midweek edition of Culture Study - the newsletter from Anne Helen Petersen. If you like it and want more like it in your inbox, consider subscribing. Subscribers: If you haven't activated your invitation to Sidechannel, email me for a new one! Along with

Scholarly Communication and Scholarly Publishing

Scholarly Communication and Scholarly Publishing

This post explores how scholarly publishing should relate to scholarly communication. Ostensibly aligned, publishing and communication have diverged. Some processes involved in scholarly publishing are getting in the way of optimal scholarly communication, as the present pandemic amply reveals. 

Why is the Science Museum Still Being Contaminated by Shell's Dirty Money? | George Monbiot

Why is the Science Museum Still Being Contaminated by Shell's Dirty Money? | George Monbiot

It is extraordinary that the museum is receiving funding from a fossil fuel giant for an exhibition on, of all things, the climate, says Guardian columnist George Monbiot.

Microbes Are 'unknown Unknowns' Despite Being Vital to All Life, Says Study

Microbes Are 'unknown Unknowns' Despite Being Vital to All Life, Says Study

Understanding these tiny organisms could be key to tackling threats such as coronavirus, but new research shows how little we know