South Africa: Hunger Among South African Students – Study Shows Those Studying Remotely Need Financial Aid for Food
[The Conversation Africa] The spectre of food insecurity unfortunately haunts many households in South Africa.
WEDNESDAY, 17 SEPTEMBER 2025, 07:36
[The Conversation Africa] The spectre of food insecurity unfortunately haunts many households in South Africa.
[The Conversation Africa] Access to school is considered to be better for children who live in urban areas than in rural areas in countries such as Kenya. But research shows that this access doesn’t translate into children doing better at school if the setting is an informal settlement. Despite being able to attend school, some children don’t fully enjoy their right to education, because the...
In the remote state of Meghalaya, foraged foods are helping to diversify state-provided menus – and tackle chronic malnutrition
Excited chatter and the clattering of steel plates drown out the din of the monsoon rains: it is lunchtime in Laitsohpliah government school in the north-east Indian state of Meghalaya. The food has been cooked on-site and is free for everyone, part of India’s...
Children describe positive memories of family time, as well as the darker side of pandemic life online.
Exclusive: Research finds more than 1,000 schools have suffered cumulative real-terms cuts in excess of £1m each
School leaders in England are having to double up as caretakers and lollipop men and women as funding “hits rock bottom”, teaching unions have said.
Others are having to call on relatives to help fix crumbling buildings and do other odd jobs after years of “inadequate” funding...
Highly educated Kenyans working for essay mills ghostwrite academic work that students pass off as their own
There is a secret industry that generates billions of dollars a year. Its workers are bright, industrious and completely anonymous. Their job is writing essays to order for students – in the UK and elsewhere – to help them get good degrees.
These are “shadow scholars”, highly...
Money is almost always tight as a student, but fitting work around your studies requires a little forethought and planning if you want to avoid a negative impact on those grades
If you’re planning to go to university, you may also be thinking about getting a job while studying. But it can be difficult to know where to look, especially if you’re moving to an unfamiliar city.
The most...
Students may have had a reputation for boozy behaviour, but there are ways to make friends for those who prefer to keep things straight edge
For as long as anyone can remember, drinking has been a key part of the student experience – but this is changing. An increasing number of young people are turning away from drinking, with a 2024 poll by Student Beans finding that half of first-year...
Responsibility for vocational training and skills has bounced around Whitehall for years, with enrolment rates down by a third. Can the latest tweaks work?
Ensuring England’s workforce has the right skills for a rapidly changing economy is key to Labour’s hopes of boosting social mobility and kickstarting economic growth.
So it seems unfortunate that more than a week after Keir Starmer’s...
President Trump has walked back some significant immigration policies that collide with his economic agenda, angering his far-right allies.
America’s cancer research system, which has helped save millions of lives, is under threat in one of its most productive moments.
In “We the People,” the Harvard historian worries that the glacial amendment process is leading the country to crisis.
The ubiquitous AI tool has a divisive effect on educators with some seeing it a boon and others a menace. So what should you know about where to draw the line between check and cheat?
For many students, ChatGPT has become as standard a tool as a notebook or a calculator.
Whether it’s tidying up grammar, organising revision notes, or generating flashcards, AI is fast becoming a go-to companion...
AI is making universities rethink how they assess students, with some turning to presentations, vivas and quizzes
For 18-year-old Rose Kade from London, deciding between studying geography or maths at university is not just about the subject, it’s about how she will be assessed.
“I don’t like exams,” she says. “I feel like anything can happen on the day, and I find it hard being judged...
School leaders say emotionally based school avoidance is increasing, but what should be done to help?
Union condemns racial abuse and threats George Abaraonye suffered after ‘inappropriate remarks’ celebrating shooting
• Charlie Kirk’s US campus tour will continue despite his death, widow says – US politics live
The president-elect of the Oxford Union will face disciplinary proceedings for making “inappropriate remarks” celebrating the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk, the union has announced...
We can condemn his assassination without mythologizing him.
Three years after leak led to claims of social media spying, city authorities have agreed to independent investigation
“I’ve realised how damaging the whole thing’s been because, you know, you can’t trust people,” Jen Smith says from her home in Bristol.
Smith is one of a number of parents of children with special education needs and disabilities (Send) who allege Bristol city council spied...
Artificial intelligence is changing how students learn and the world they’ll graduate into. Experts reveal how applicants can get ahead
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman recently told a US podcast that if he was graduating today, “I would feel like the luckiest kid in all of history.”
Altman, whose company developed and released ChatGPT in November 2022, believes the transformative power of AI offers...
The social side of university is good for your mental health and friendship circle, so consider where you’d be happiest to hang out
Choosing which university to attend based on social scene alone probably isn’t the wisest idea, but that doesn’t mean it shouldn’t rank high on your list of priorities. Not only are sticky dancefloors and blinding strobe lighting a sort of rite of passage, a...
Sampling the outpouring of responses to a column by David Brooks about the shortcomings of the liberal approach to the nation’s ills.