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
Research for the public good being subverted by geopolitical ‘zero-sum competition’, says former LSE professor
But experts ask how long country’s success can last in the face of rampant competition from Asia
Institutions that win performance-related funding will fall behind anyway, university group claims
University presses need to collaborate and think big in an uncertain marketplace, says UNSW executive
Evidence suggests citations boost from working with industry
Doubts over impact of Australian scheme after previous fee discount programme was scrapped
Universities ‘relieved’ at rejection of defence department demands for more control over technology they create
Gradings influenced more by sex and ethnicity than teachers’ experience
Australian university releases details of curriculum for philanthropically funded degree
Sir Chris Husbands visits Australia as it considers introducing performance-related funding system similar to UK’s teaching excellence framework
University presses should not produce popular books at the expense of academic ones, say scholars
Australian researchers say a lack of guidance material forces researchers to second-guess ethics committees
If popular books trump scholarly monographs, what’s the point of academic publishers? asks John Ross
Counting China’s first green billionaire among your mentees doesn’t hurt in funding applications, says UNSW professor
Rebalancing of global higher education promises end of era in which institutions all ‘strive to be the same as Harvard’, says professor
Ramsay Centre proposal ‘crosses red lines’, says union
The meta-analysis guru talks about the tyranny of low expectations, swimming upstream and the knowledge that an educated citizen needs
Four institutions to pilot online module next year
But flagging Chinese applications could dampen future growth
Research agencies tight-lipped about global initiative, but are talking behind the scenes
Independent colleges ‘defined by what they’re not, not what they are’, Teqsa report says
While China’s intensification puts regional rivals in the shade, it casts a spotlight on progress in the special administrative region
Accusations of interference as Melbourne University Publishing focuses on scholarly works
Details of law allowing international providers to operate in special economic zones have been released