
- Date
- 17 July 2014 - 16:50
What's happening to Syria's students during the conflict?
When a country is at war, what happens to its universities?
- Tags
- Universities and higher education
Voices
When a country is at war, what happens to its universities?
Donald Hyslop, Head of Regeneration and Partnerships at London’s Tate Modern, tells us how the museum has regenerated a whole neighbourhood since it first opened in 2000.
Zuzanna Stanska, one of the British Council’s Young Creative Entrepreneurs, created DailyArt, a mobile app that sends users a piece of art every day, now downloaded by 100,000 people
Can you imagine living and working in beautiful, tropical Malaysian Borneo? Rob Gordon is one of over 120 British Council mentors working with primary school teachers
Andrea Rose answers our questions about her visit to North Korea at the invitation of the DPRK (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) authorities.
Lizzie Pinard, winner of the TeachingEnglish monthly blog award, writes about how reflecting on your teaching practice can help you improve your teaching skills.
The British Council’s Michael Peak runs us through the trends in recent years (link to data visualisation), as UCAS releases figures on undergraduate enrolment in UK universities today.
Charlotte Ogilvie, who taught in a Thai school last year through the British Council’s Thailand English Teaching programme, explains how to make the most of your time outside the classroom
What are the trends in study abroad? Janice Mulholland of the British Council’s US office explains the big issues in US universities’ international education programmes.
The British Council’s Caroline Chipperfield explains how more and more higher education institutions are becoming an integral part of their local communities.