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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‘Renaissance’ ideals of integrity may mean little to the sharing economy generation, Australian conference hears
Australian public service chief rails against scale in call for “alternatives” to huge comprehensive institutions
For all their collegiality, pay disparity in Australian universities is ‘not out of step’ with big business
Australian study suggests simply reinstating on-campus tests may not have much effect
Articulating numerical goals can focus efforts, commentators say, but not always in the right direction
Sector should use review to break free from internal preoccupation and ‘utilitarian’ focus on private domestic benefit, conference hears
Economist released weeks after being sentenced to three years’ imprisonment over ‘trumped up’ charges
Difficult decisions require uncomfortable truths, epidemiologist tells Pacific Rim universities
Non-partisan panel asked to update access targets and complete Bradley review’s unfinished business
Region’s biggest transformative agreement ‘an important first step’ in open access ‘journey’
Successful applications from south Asia fall off a cliff, as authorities struggle to distinguish genuine students from those with other things on their minds
You are part of the problem, academic union tells Labour, as government declines to ‘step in’
Funding council reviewer signals intent to recommend ditching ERA, rewriting national interest test and circumscribing veto power
New Australian arrangement hailed as long overdue by many, but critics warn of unintended consequences
Always left holding the wrong end of the stick, independent institutions hope for a ‘reset’ from the misleadingly named universities accord
Point-in-time study quantifies pandemic’s differential impacts on academics with children – particularly mothers
Other suggestions to ease military skill shortages include funding future reservists’ studies and ‘opening up’ to international students
Go8 questions outsiders’ commitment to research, after advisory body raises doubts over education’s contribution to productivity
While remote delivery remains popular with many international students, authorities hose down prospects of fully online degrees
Student union demands overhaul as post-Covid cost pressures exacerbate student poverty
Policymakers will need to work out exactly what ‘equity’ means before entrenching it in new funding arrangements
Data theft from health insurance giant stokes fears that students could be targeted by hackers or their impersonators
Melbourne boss explains why knowledge is service, and why unbridled casualisation would displease his dad
Australian government’s cash injection may provide short-term relief, but lack of clarity hinders planning, says former civil servant