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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Using international education proceeds for students’ benefit could galvanise overseas enrolments and defuse community ‘resentment’, study finds
Commentators warn that history could repeat itself as uncapped work rights linger for at least a semester
Australian thinktank stakes new ground in the quest for practical engagement
Extraordinary meeting fails to resolve governance concerns raised by scores of fellows
Academics call for rethink of latest Australian security intervention
While staff hostility towards philanthropically backed humanities courses has not abated, entry and satisfaction scores suggest students take a different view
But insiders say there are votes to be gained in policies to make participation more equitable
More ‘operating deficits’ tipped as Australia’s national university reboots activity levels in a Covid-normal world
Australian universities face more restrictions on their foreign collaboration, no matter who wins the coming election
Cutting-edge facilities are welcome but they achieve little without people to run them, science advocates point out
But positive results owe much to temporary government and stock market lifelines, according to early institutional accounts
Identification of new species ‘a beautiful example of the impact indigenous culture and science can have when combined’
But promised infrastructure and research commercialisation funding could stretch thin
尽管经济发展“大规模”转向亚洲,但大学未能为海外学生提供适合回国的职业建议
Australia’s big talk on science aspirations overlooks the skills needed to make it all happen, critics say
Campuses almost devoid of people nevertheless remained hotbeds of sexual harassment and assault
Canberra’s policy changes helped turn its big-ticket infrastructure schemes into pipe dreams, university-industry report argues
After fighting off attempt to expel them, academics resign from learned academy over ‘untoward political focus’
Penalties for student snitches and curbs on Confucius Institutes and Thousand Talents Programme among dozens of recommendations from security committee
New Zealand now perceived poorly on factors where it used to excel, survey finds
Huge national survey finds that half of students know little or nothing about formal reporting mechanisms
War in Ukraine may reshape university internationalisation, but most academics do not expect a knockout blow
‘Task force’ to facilitate two-way flow of students and graduates