Further
New chapter: How college are helping to change people's lives
The upcoming Colleges Week will highlight the many benefits that college life offers.
Inside Further
Recipe for a great career: How college gave one man the ingredients to succeed in the restaurant business
Thursday, 5 November 2009
Restaurateur James Thomson didn't like school. Much of his time was spent looking out of the windows at the old buildings of Edinburgh, fantasising about their history and the people who had lived there. What Thomson did like was working. Aged 12, he became a dishwasher at Crawford's tearooms on North Bridge. "My grandmother had a cashier job there, and they were always short of dishwashers, so I was called in. I loved the theatre of the place – they served morning coffee, lunches and high tea, and had old-fashioned cake stands and waitresses who all mothered me and gave me strawberry tarts to eat. I also helped the chef. I loved things like the smell of the coffee and cheeses, and the whole ambience of the place."
John Bingham: 'Governors are having more impact and reporting greater job satisfaction than before'
Thursday, 5 November 2009
Chief executive officer of the Fitness Industry Association
How training can help you develop the skills for survival
Thursday, 5 November 2009
The downturn is no time to abandon training. Kate Hilpern argues that it's the point when you need it most
With distance learning, not being in the same country as your university isn't a problem
Thursday, 29 October 2009
Bought anything on eBay recently? A flight booked online, perhaps? Or maybe surfed around looking at insurance premiums? We do so much of our own business online these days that it's hardly a revolutionary idea to learn about business via the internet. That explains the healthy supply of online and distance-learning postgraduate courses in the field of business education. The Association of Business Schools (ABS) lists higher-education institutions offering one or other model of distance learning, leading to a management-related Masters.
A clearer future: Why sustainability graduates are in hot demand
Thursday, 29 October 2009
It's not a word you would have seen in course titles 10 years ago, but Masters courses in sustainability have been popping up in many universities and business schools over the past few years. One of the first was at the Centre for Research Into Sustainability at Royal Holloway, University of London, which offers an MSc in sustainability and management. The course, taught between the management and geography departments, was first offered in 2004.
Rise to the challenge: Stand out from the crowded jobs market with a Masters in business management
Thursday, 29 October 2009
With one in 10 of this summer's graduates expected to be unemployed six months after leaving university – a sharp rise on previous years – applications for postgraduate courses have jumped. It seems that recent graduates, frustrated by the toughest jobs market in more than a decade, are taking to heart recent findings from the Higher Education Statistics Agency showing that holders of postgraduate degrees are likely to get higher paid and better jobs than those with only one degree.
John Bingham: 'This reform will improve the support that governors need'
Thursday, 2 July 2009
Chair of the board, Association of Colleges
Degrees of comfort: Where to find smaller classes and caring lecturers
Thursday, 2 July 2009
Some students prefer to take university-level courses at further education colleges, where they get smaller classes, a more hands-on approach and help with employment when they graduate.
The joy of studying without moving
Thursday, 18 June 2009
Distance learning provides an opportunity to 'future proof' your career.
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5 Channel 4 to crash 300-seat jet into desert new
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8 Voight vs Jolie: Is Hollywood's most famous family feud near an end? new
9 The Ten Best Seduction Techniques
10 Near death experiences caught on film
11 What were they thinking? Football fashion disasters
12 Seattle's teenage Jesse James
13 The Rolling Stone who gathered no money
Emailed
1 Three-minute therapy: Can 'speed shrinking' fix your head in 180 seconds?
2 Voight vs Jolie: Is Hollywood's most famous family feud near an end? new
3 Plan at last to tackle 'liquid cosh' dementia drugs new
4 Testing and assessment: We will fail him on the beaches
5 The Big Question: Why is Britain's DNA database the biggest in the world, and is it effective?
6 Brown details tighter immigration rules
7 Peter Bills: Leicester epitomise the meaning of a rugby club
8 Robert Fisk: America is performing its familiar role of propping up a dictator
9 Channel 4 to crash 300-seat jet into desert new
10 Sharp-toothed shark acts as midwife
11 Enke funeral to be held on Sunday
12 Has Cameron done a deal with Murdoch?
13 'Legal highs' crackdown is doomed to failure, say experts
14 'Starting school too young can be bad for children's education'
Commented
1Has Cameron done a deal with Murdoch?
2Brown details tighter immigration rules
3Johann Hari: Accept the facts ? and end this futile 'war on drugs'
4Anger over MoD civil servants' bonuses
5Undercurrent of doubt over electric motors
6Mandelson to become Government's 'TV face'
7They come in search of justice ? but end up thrown into jail
8US 'wants to guard Pakistan's nuclear arsenal'
9Armistice Day: The Great War and the words we mustn't forget
Columnist Comments
• Matthew Norman: Cowell is a God
He has no need to play God. On Greek mythological lines, he is one
• Adrian Hamilton: Lies, damn lies and Berlin speeches
We're back to propping up rotten regimes. Stability is more important than values
• Christina Patterson: Why it's hard to be a blonde in the City
A big, fat, dark, ugly man who complained about their intelligence
