In 1913, three people sat down to take the first Cambridge English exam. They were all teachers and all of them failed. But would you? This is one of the questions - you can find the answers at the ...
The historian – once dubbed ‘the rudest man in Britain’ – on cancel culture, free speech and why he refuses to ‘shut up’ ...
Ali Smith scrambles plotlines, upends characters, and flouts chronology—while telling propulsively readable stories.
In his new book Nalanda, breathtaking in its sweep and lyrical in its glory, the poet-diplomat Abhay K unearths with tender precision the most luminous jewel, nestled amid lush mango groves and ringed ...
Fear not! Checklist has put together a list of ten standout education brands that are not only making learning fun but are ...
The multiple feedback loops that are now appearing may mean the logjam that has held up one of computer science’s major ...
A former Chelsea, Newcastle and Gillingham midfielder has told how he has gone from scoring goals to shepherding souls in a ...
Irvin Matus The new reading room of the Folger Shakespeare Library is dominated by a huge painting of the sort that Oscar Wilde's Lady Bracknell migh ...
Emily Cushion argues that we must foreground the Arts, even if those branches lead to uncertain ends ...
Mr Bentley became one of England’s greatest ever scholars thanks to his mother who gave her son his first lessons in Latin and to his education at a grammar ... s College, Cambridge, in 1676.