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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If just one in 20 supported technologies hits paydirt, new fund will pay for itself, says STEM lobby
Swinburne says former councillor and union rep was not targeted, but he says redundancy criteria were written for him
Scholars expressing ‘shock and horror’ call for ‘immediate stop’ to Putin’s ‘senseless’ invasion
Back-to-campus plans postponed as classes make way for crisis centres
A ‘dashboard’ of metrics for assessing science communication could help generate 100 million hours a year of evidence-charged ‘dialogue’
Researchers support drive for quality over quantity but warn of unintended consequences
由人工智能驱动的研究发现,高校外的研究工作机会增长强劲
No group should have exclusive ‘authority to speak’, New Zealand forum hears
Back-to-campus plans hit snags on both sides of the Tasman
Universities say they proactively uncover underpayments, but former casual claims they only acknowledge the obvious cases
Vertical campus ‘well suited’ to small group teaching, as students navigate degrees one block at a time
Canberra’s work rights strategy influences make-up of new arrivals, as Perth changes entry rules again
‘Vast majority’ of promised research commercialisation fund falls outside spending commitments, estimates committee also hears
Funding council statistics lend weight to anecdotal accounts that academics are self-censoring scholarship on superpower
University casuals less likely to win permanent employment than cleaners or bank workers, Senate inquiry finds
It’s a balancing act, as some crave company and others isolation, but most vice-chancellors want their people back ‘as often as possible’
Open access champion also proposes an IB for universities, as competition gives way to collaboration
Belated data show that inexperienced, untenured and non-academic staff shouldered the lion’s share of job losses
Furore over political interference shows no sign of abating, as government presses ahead with research commercialisation agenda
There is no simple answer to entrenched inequities in research funding, Australian agency finds
Vice-chancellor criticises ‘bipartisan support’ for rules enabling ministers to intervene in grant awards
While 5,000 students could arrive in April, the rest will not be admitted until October, effectively ruling out campus-based studies before 2023
Pay, promotions and intellectual property protections set for ‘refinement’ under new action plan
入境要求一周内被更改叁次,而“不可能”的新截止日期缺乏明显的健康理由支撑