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Integrate academic skills into your teaching: 10 practical tips

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We get it, sometimes it feels like there’s nowhere near enough time with your students, especially when you’re juggling supporting study skills alongside teaching another discipline. That's why we compiled some tangible, easily actionable advice and practical resources to help you boost your support right now, without adding much to your workload. 


Promote your article – and maximise your impact

Every year another 2 million scholarly articles are published. The sheer volume, and constraints on time to keep up with the literature, mean that inevitably not all of them will be widely read.

Between us, we can improve the chances of your article being found, read, downloaded and cited – of your article and you making an impact.




Supporting you in this new environment

To help you navigate the challenges and opportunities of the online teaching transition and working in a post-COVID world, we've assembled the following resources. Curated by experts, they are based on extensive research to tailor to your current needs.



Winners of 2015 Freedom of Expression Awards announced

  • Index on Censorship announces winners of 2015 Freedom of Expression Awards
  • Special award given to journalists and activists in Azerbaijan
  • Judges included Martha Lane Fox, Mariane Pearl, Keir Starmer, and Elif Shafak

London, A Kenyan woman speaking out for women in one of the world’s most dangerous regions and a journalist who exposed an unreported uprising in Saudi Arabia are among the winners of this year’s Index on Censorship Freedom of Expression Awards.


Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists’ Special 70th Anniversary Issue: Future Threats

CHICAGO – As editor John Mecklin writes in his introduction to this 70th anniversary issue of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists’ subscription journal, “The first issue of the Bulletin was a slim volume that displayed less than state-of-the-art production values, even for 1945; it was more newsletter than magazine or journal. But from its inception 70 years ago, what was initially known as the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists of Chicago aimed high.


New Study: Are voters influenced by campaign visits?

Despite their extensive national press coverage, campaign visits might not be worth presidential candidates’ time and resources. A new study out today finds that voters are largely unaware of and unresponsive to campaign visits. The study was published as part of a special issue of The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science (a journal from SAGE Publishing) titled “Elections in America.”


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