With exit polls predicting a landslide win, new PM Keir Starmer’s dull but steady approach seems to have paid off, but what does it mean for UK politics, and the rest of the world?
Cost-of-living increases, inflation, and energy prices affect everyone. And that matters even more when we’re amid a significant generational shift in voting patterns.
A new national survey has found career stability and funding are two key factors turning young scientists away from research.
School-leavers want flexibility and gig work offers it. But how will that affect the economy?
Inspirational clinical psychology graduate Dr Victoria Gentile exemplifies the importance of Indigenous students in the future of healthcare, and shows why more are needed.
We can tap into both First Nations and Western leadership concepts to create the next generation of Indigenous business leaders.
Health status is more complex than just your address. At a population level, the biggest predictor of health status is the social determinants of health. We need to think outside the box to determine who needs care most, and how it can be delivered.
Medical students in Melbourne spent much of 2020-21 learning via Zoom, but for rural students it was a case of hands-on healthcare with real patient outcomes – and now many of them are staying put.
Only one in nine medical graduates see general practice as a career choice, and the implications should deeply concern everyone.
The Taliban’s decision to ban women from accessing higher education has been described as a betrayal of not only Afghan women, but the international community.
While capital skills don’t necessarily translate into job offers for international students, research shows they improve key wellbeing, sustainability, and professional growth aspects.
Virtual mobility is part of the “new” normal in higher education, but to capitalise on this potential, we need to ensure students are fully on board.
The gendered impacts of pregnancy and early parenthood don’t just impact women prior to the start of paid work, but during their university studies.
Difficulties in attracting and retaining teachers have much to do with their working conditions. We need to develop a fairer and better school system.
A change of federal government in Australia presents an opportunity to focus on schools as a whole and help create a sustainable environment for teachers to thrive.
For employers to feel confident hiring individuals who graduated from their course in the 2020s, they need to be convinced of their job-worthiness.
Current medical programs need to diversify their curriculums by at least incorporating resources for medical students to look after their mental health, deal with pressures at work, and even career change.
Monash University is No.1 in the world for pharmacy and pharmacology, but what does that mean, and how are the university rankings calculated?
There are things we need to unlearn, learn and relearn about conditions for living together on this planet in just, equitable and sustainable ways.
Afghan women have resisted the discriminatory policies imposed on them, and actively advocated to reclaim their shrinking space to practise their rights. In this, music plays a role.
Monash Education celebrates the stories of five people nominated by senior leadership for their work in #breakingthebias both at work and home.
How someone perceives and responds to uncertain stimuli is an essential workplace skill in nearly every industry.
Educators from Indonesia, Vietnam, Singapore, the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia and Australia recently shared their experiences of leading their communities during the pandemic.
For students who walked out of classes on Friday, the climate crisis protests are about extending their voices beyond the stifling grasp of schools.
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