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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‘Bloodbath’ in traditional Liberal seats shows that anti-intellectualism is no longer a vote winner, consultant says
Labor may prosecute a big agenda in higher education despite its ‘small target’ campaign
Boost to teaching subsidies will not keep pace with inflation, critics warn
Battling for truth in opaque organisations? It’s enough to blow your mind, researchers say
Proposed changes risk further eroding support funding for discovery research without achieving their core objectives
New strategy looks outward as well as inward, as government vows to ‘come back even stronger than before’
Campaign promises reflect electoral rather than sectoral priorities
Disadvantaged families have upbeat expectations for their offspring but underestimate the barriers, study suggests
Policies to attract foreign students to Australia’s regional areas are not changing their instinctive preference for the cities, analysis suggests
尽管有两个月的缓冲期,该国高校仍有“很多工作要做”
La Trobe prolongs blackout on Russell Street bomber Craig Minogue’s dissertation, citing concerns over ‘identifying material’
As Australia’s general election looms, many in university circles may be hoping that Scott Morrison’s coalition is voted out. But is it true that conservative governments and universities are natural antagonists? And how much better would the sector fare under a Labor administration? John Ross reports
Blamed for housing prices largely beyond their own reach, overseas students are both courted and resented
Underfunding, compliance costs and buffer targets have left universities with ‘no room to manoeuvre’, says representative group
Extent of staffing overhauls bore little relationship to Covid’s financial carnage, says report
Less than 5 per cent of medical students on indentureship deal have fulfilled obligations to work outside cities
Special intake should be at least doubled, vice-chancellor says
Rival centre’s establishment highlights the problems for thinktanks in universities
As staff reel from an austerity drive, Victoria produces its first A$3 billion institution
Findings raise red flag for Australia’s economically crucial international enrolments
Generation-high inflation raises particular issues for humanities students and universities confronting a demographic bulge
Universities have the connections and resources for sophisticated risk management, not just ‘bureaucratic box-ticking’, says British-Australian academic
Melbourne institute’s mission to heal relations with India clashes with academics’ desire to spotlight subcontinent abuses
Union wants income-contingent loans scheme gone, while universities want it extended