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>
International education is ‘not a one-way street’, Canberra insists, as it limits inbound travel
International student crackdown partly a response to world of ‘fragmentation, competition and protectionism’
Anglosphere countries risk squandering their market advantage, researchers warn
Scion of academic and ministerial family could champion ‘a push towards academic excellence’, but policy intent is ‘hard to read’
‘Revenue hit’ will undermine universities’ ability to recruit foreign faculty while driving more locals overseas
Troubled institution joins neighbouring ANU in flagging major cuts, saying it is ‘spending beyond its means’
Proposal to let universities control regional study hubs ‘raises more questions than answers’
New restructure proposals, ‘the last of the year’, would claim more than 100 positions
Record increases scheduled as caps proposal leaves universities ‘singing different songs’
Institutions in six continents plan fightback against creeping denigration of the social sciences
Waiving pay during Covid did not prevent redundancies, union warns members
Personal touch the magic ingredient in a programme credited with keeping research hotshots on home base
Pandemic-style redundancies feared as universities count their losses
Parliamentarians dismiss warnings about workload and academic freedom infringements
Unfazed by unemployment, and resigned about home ownership, learners are taking their feet off the pedal
With major parties backing the legislation, controversial enrolment quotas appear a done deal
Open access champions make ‘the perfect the enemy of the good’ by opposing chief scientist’s plan
Half of sector goes backwards in this year’s table, as international student caps threaten more damage
US-based education support site taken to court by regulator, in first test of nascent legislation
Releasing details of Paddy Nixon’s final-year earnings of $A1.8 million would be ‘contrary to the public interest’, Canberra insists
Monash vice-chancellor discusses universities' progress on preventing gender-based abuse and the 'flattening effect' on internationalisation
Inquiry recommends unamended passage of Universities Accord reforms bill
Last-minute decision leaves some institutions safe and others stranded
At least 50 job cuts proposed as university confronts A$200 million hole caused by ‘external headwinds’ and federal policy changes