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.
<榴莲视频 class="pane-title">
Articles by John Ross 榴莲视频>
Beijing’s abolition of Covid-era concession expected to spur international enrolments while generating logistical migraines
Living allowances become key part of the recruitment pitch, as universities battle for research students and students wrestle with inflation
Students, universities, investors and governments grapple for answers as Australian housing costs skyrocket and availability plummets
Financially troubled University of the South Pacific was left with ?29 million black hole when leadership fell out with biggest member state
Fraud and fabrication are not rarities, suggests Australian survey of early career scholars
Poorly understood clause in new Australian act may oblige universities to reach terms with representatives, just as they develop a taste for dealing directly with staff
Rather than focusing on students’ plans after they graduate, Canberra should assure itself of their commitment to study
Times Higher Education journalists name the academics and administrators at the heart of the sector’s biggest debates over the past 12 months
With fervent political support and promises of substantial funding, on-again off-again amalgamation now appears viable
为恢复国际学生的入学率,澳大利亚高校“有许多工作要做”
Professional staff say ‘yes’, academics say ‘no’ as another Australian university bypasses the union
榴莲视频 affairs minister pledges to speed up admission of world’s ‘best and brightest’
Australian university representatives warn of unintended consequences from two-year limit in new workplace relations act
High upfront costs defeated the most recent proposal for the two South Australian institutions to join forces back in 2018 but now things have changed
What makes a sabbatical special any more, asks professor, if it is a continuation of the demands of academic life rather than a break from them
White paper vows to reshape science sector but also shies away from suggested creation of base operating grants for institutions
While unions see applications in the private college sector, Australian universities worry about being forced to enter collective bargaining
As underpayment claims embroil at least half the sector, Griffith’s proposed circuit breaker provokes more discord
文化熟悉度、安全感和不断攀升的排名提升了学生们对邻近国家的兴趣
‘Read and publish’ deals must not be the only game in town, critic warns
Joint programme eyes trifecta of research skills, disciplinary knowledge and business acumen
Critics claim victory as assessment of research benefits is handed back to the experts
Independent housing ‘moderately to severely unaffordable’, as locals opt for alternatives
Narrow line between success and failure in latest round of Australian competitive grant funding