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Before yesterdayUniversities | The Guardian

The Guardian view on universities: arts cuts are the tip of an iceberg | Editorial

Ministers are ultimately responsible for weakening the arts and humanities. They are taking the country backwards

The announcement that the University of East Anglia is to cut 31 arts and humanities posts โ€“ out of a total of 36 academic job cuts โ€“ has rightly prompted anger as well as dismay. UEA became a literary flagship among the new universities that opened in the 1960s. This year is its 60th birthday, and since 1970 it has been home to one of the most famous creative writing courses in the world: founded by the novelists Malcolm Bradbury and Angus Wilson, its students have included Anne Enright, Ian McEwan and the Nobel laureate Kazuo Ishiguro.

There is shock, among alumni and observers, that the financial problems of the UKโ€™s higher education sector now threaten such prestigious institutions. Once celebrated for their innovative approaches, 1960s campus universities were where different kinds of courses were developed. Creative writing is one example; media, development and womenโ€™s studies are others. In cutting the arts and humanities in these universities, managers and policymakers are turning back the clock โ€“ at a time when, arguably, there has never been a greater need for courageous innovation. Any idea that the risks are limited to the post-1992 universities should be junked.

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Cost of living crisis forcing students to take on more hours of paid work

Most university students supporting themselves say it is negatively affecting their studies, survey finds

The cost of living crisis is forcing more university students to take on more hours in their part-time jobs, with most saying that supporting themselves is affecting their studies, according to a new study.

More than half of the 10,000 students surveyed by the Higher Education Policy Institute (Hepi) said they did paid work during term time, with most saying they were using their wages to support their studies.

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Student loan debt in England surpasses ยฃ200bn for first time

Graduates now owe an average amount of ยฃ45,000, Student Loans Company figures have revealed

Outstanding student loans in England have surpassed ยฃ200bn for the first time โ€“ 20 years earlier than previous government forecasts, as the number of students at universities continues to outstrip expectations.

The Student Loans Company (SLC), which administers tuition and maintenance loans in England, said that the balance of government-backed loans reached ยฃ205bn in the current academic year, including ยฃ19bn worth of new loans to undergraduates. The figure has doubled in just six years. It reached more than ยฃ100bn in 2016-17 after the coalition government decided to increase undergraduate tuition fees from ยฃ3,600 a year to ยฃ9,000 in 2012.

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After Brexit, if Sunak really wants a โ€˜science superpowerโ€™, he must fix these three things | Devi Sridhar

Science now has a cabinet seat, but Britainโ€™s world-leading reputation is fading fast

Another day brings yet another cabinet reshuffle to a weary Britain, but to the university community, it was welcome news to see โ€œscienceโ€ getting a dedicated department and a seat at the cabinet table. It fits with Rishi Sunakโ€™s pledge to make the UK a โ€œscience and technology superpowerโ€ and was partially in response to a cross-party House of Lords science and technology committee report on the UKโ€™s โ€œsomewhat incoherentโ€ international science policy.

Across the world, Britain is renowned for its universities and world-leading research. A scholarship to study at Oxford, the worldโ€™s oldest English-speaking university, is what brought me from tropical Miami to England, and then Scotland. Sadly, the past decade has seen the UK university sector losing its lustre for students and faculty. While itโ€™s easy to talk about making science a priority, supporting world-leading research requires action and concrete steps that go beyond rhetoric. To make the UK a โ€œscience superpowerโ€ means addressing at least three crucial components.

Prof Devi Sridhar is chair of global public health at the University of Edinburgh

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Welsh universities face 1,000 jobs being lost as EU research funding ends

University leaders urge ministers to provide bridging finance to keep projects running when EU support ends this year

Universities in Wales face more than 1,000 skilled jobs being lost because of the withdrawal of EU structural funds, with leaders saying that the replacement finance promised by ministers will not match the lost support.

Since 2014 Welsh universities have received about ยฃ370m in research projects from EU structural funds but, after the UKโ€™s withdrawal, its support for 60 ongoing projects will end this year.

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Students in Wales to get ยฃ1,000 maintenance boost amid cost of living crisis

Labour says inflation may force more students to drop out, as those in England get just ยฃ200 more on average

Students from Wales will get ยฃ1,000 more to help with the cost of living crisis while those in England get just ยฃ200 on average, as Labour MPs said inflation may force more students to drop out of university.

The Welsh government said maintenance loans and grants for its students would rise by 9.4% from September, with support for full-time students increasing from ยฃ10,710 to ยฃ11,720 on average. Students in England will get a rise of just 2.8% in the next academic year after the Westminster governmentโ€™s announcement last week, with the average maintenance loan increasing by about ยฃ200.

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