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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Greens discussion paper blames corporate governance for sector’s most pressing problems
合同作弊网站推出打折、聊天机器人、退款保证等促销手段
Refreshed guidelines allow universities to choose which academics face scrutiny of their overseas affiliations
Pacific expert’s selection coincides with policy push to boost islander participation in higher education
AI analysis of online activity reveals ‘really nice’ sentiment and sophisticated understanding of government structures
Green paper ‘asks the right questions’, including whether crown research institutes should collocate with universities
‘Sense prevails’ as New South Wales declares that incoming students will be treated like locals
New Zealand’s embrace of Māori vocabulary goes hand-in-hand with the incorporation of Māori understandings into curricula. But is a debate about the unintended consequences of this move being stifled by fear of speaking out? John Ross reports
University governance bodies an ‘outlier’ in Australia, with sectoral experience an oddity
As Australian policy focus pivots from international education to research commercialisation, ‘it’s the right time for us to shine’, says new head Andrew Parfitt
In-house appointment breaks with trend of selecting leaders from outside the country, or outside academia
Institutional affiliation counts for little in determining students’ future earnings, analysis suggests
Funding changes will help generate ‘intellectual infrastructure’, but universities harbour reservations
Fifty-two minutes that changed the world underpinned by 30 years of basic research
Students flying in from Singapore won’t need to isolate, as long as they’re from Singapore
State becomes first jurisdiction to step back from its pilot scheme, after being first to get one approved
With their home economies bouncing back and students keen to travel, countries face vaccination validation as next obstacle
Funding guarantee ‘cost government nothing’ and funding reforms ‘delivered no extra students’, Senate estimates committee hears
‘Parallel universes’ promise more pain for international education, even as Covid finish line beckons
Vast majority of respondents to THE survey say ‘sage on the stage’ still has a place, despite experience of online teaching during pandemic
Ombudsman pledges crackdown if institutions fail to come clean
Governments are ‘critical stakeholders’ and do not take kindly to universities ‘crying poor’, says former media boss Mark Scott
Fresh ‘wage theft’ claims arise as Australian legislation to combat casualisation fails to scratch the surface