John Ross joined Times Higher Education?as?APAC editor in February 2018. He was previously higher education and science correspondent with The Australian newspaper. He has won the National Press Club’s Higher Education Journalist of the Year award three times, most recently in 2022, and has been shortlisted six times. He holds a communications degree from what is now the University of Technology Sydney. He swims in the Pacific Ocean every day, drinks too much coffee and plays Galician bagpipes quite badly.
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Articles by John Ross 网曝门>
Australian universities’ 2020 financial fortunes were little influenced by their dependence on overseas students
Australian researchers’ funding hopes hinge not on whether rule was wrong, but on whether wrong rule was applied correctly
Mood among academics, students and administrators swinging behind compulsory jabs
University ‘keen to engage’ staff and students on ‘merger’, while sidestepping inconsistencies in proposal
Geoff Hanmer claims Australian universities are being pressured to build towering city campuses that students dislike
Policies geared to a ‘low-skilled guest worker society’ belie Australia’s pretensions to recruit the ‘best and brightest students’
Melbourne university cites occupational health obligations and students’ desperation to return to campus
Rare example of a reverse gender pay gap suggests that at least early on, female and male PhDs are on a level pay pegging
University leaders would not exercise freedom even if the state did not have them under its thumb, says Maszlee Malik
Non-metropolitan campuses in the box seat as pandemic escalates exodus from the cities
Nuclear submarine announcement elevates importance of universities’ soft power influence, says former PM
College’s defenders say its demise will dilute free expression, but education minister says its original critics opposed it for the same reason
AI expert re-emerges at top Chinese university as former employer finds Uighur study breached Australian research code
Despite scepticism about the business model, short courses prove an earner for cash-starved institutions
But thousands of Australian researchers remain in limbo, with reviled rule still in force for grants under consideration
Technologically proficient teachers ‘struggled just as much’ in pandemic-induced online stampede
Permanent rather than casual staff now being targeted, report suggests, but expert queries data underpinning the analysis
Acknowledgment comes days after apology from Melbourne
Researcher rating tool ‘corrects for most biases’ and allows comparisons across disciplines
Buyout could remove ‘particularly innovative competitor’, watchdog warns
Observers worry that treasured institution could fracture, just like the region’s political partnership
Melbourne team focuses on ‘unsexy’ end of the next big thing in biomedicine
South Pacific nations trade barbs as unique pan-national university enters world stage
Long-time leader’s departure amid casino furore follows withdrawal of Newcastle’s coal-aligned appointee