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>
New scheme unveiled six years after its underperforming predecessor was scrapped
Experts welcome discussion but warn of unintended consequences from potential escalation of global recruitment race
Government promises response to review’s other recommendations ‘in due course’
Demand-driven funding a better option, expert says, as hundreds of international students fly into Sydney
榴莲视频bound University College Dublin leader reveals his ambition for Perth institution
Royal Society asked to expel decorated members who criticised plans to incorporate mātauranga Māori into curricula
Cathy Foley wants to extend access to scholarly journals beyond academia
New lease of life for lucky six as committee overturns scrapping of their funding applications
Alan Tudge denies wrongdoing and promises to cooperate with independent investigation
Nanotechnologist and laser expert shines the way for others, by endowment as well as by example
Latest developments on both sides of the Tasman Sea highlight the uncertainty confronting international students
Audit finds shortcomings in Australian university’s capital works, budget, fraud control and executive pay arrangements
Our review won’t work until you ‘get on with’ the last one, former v-cs tell government
Regulator dismisses Australian university’s claim that it is primarily a commercially funded organisation
Three-year post-study work visa features among changes to lure students and reduce costs to institutions
Anti-plagiarism giant’s acquisition of a key rival ‘will not substantially lessen competition’, ACCC finds
A$40 million repayments flagged so far the tip of the iceberg, union says
Role focused on supporting staff and handling complaints, but critics express concern about potential threats to academic freedom
From little things big things grow: small specialists focus on big picture
Tens of millions of dollars on offer for institutions that walk their commercialisation talk
Foreign interference concerns should not blind policymakers to the benefits of collaboration, forum hears
While progress has been hamstrung by lack of scale or regulatory force, advocates say the time has come
While Canberra’s decision is ‘great news’, students still face competition for flights and a mishmash of state rules
Research at undergraduate level engages students and helps keep the academic pipeline flowing