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>
Researcher rating tool ‘corrects for most biases’ and allows comparisons across disciplines
Buyout could remove ‘particularly innovative competitor’, watchdog warns
Observers worry that treasured institution could fracture, just like the region’s political partnership
Melbourne team focuses on ‘unsexy’ end of the next big thing in biomedicine
South Pacific nations trade barbs as unique pan-national university enters world stage
Long-time leader’s departure amid casino furore follows withdrawal of Newcastle’s coal-aligned appointee
With land prices and Covid costs both ballooning, universities are selling up and retreating on to campus
Methodological issues in 2016 study will be addressed, representative body says
游戏化并非灵丹妙药——它无法神奇地将最无聊的任务变得激动人心,但可以成为变革的催化剂
Fait accompli shutdown ‘a metaphor for the decline of Western liberalism in Asia’, say experts after Singapore decision
But offshore bulwarks take many forms – and in some institutions, staying at home works best
While Antipodean institutions have fended off competition from Asia, the full impacts of Covid are yet to flow through
Notions of reconciliation and treaty should be treated as ongoing journeys rather than destinations, summit hears
Economist says scrutiny could boost transparency of university accounts, provide benchmarking advice and avoid risky excesses
Management blamed for ‘constraining of voice’ that corrals public interventions into academics’ disciplinary areas
Australian research suggests swapping assignments is more prevalent than buying or selling them
Australian findings on receptiveness to Covid misinformation have implications for teaching as well as engagement
Fears for physics pipeline as 32 researchers relinquish up to A$22m for citing preprints
Review of Australia’s research assessment exercise focused on known problems and left inadequate time to fix them, critic says
Government told to disclose impacts on academics as outrage escalates over preprints rule
Australia’s largest regional university the latest to choose a leader from outside academia
Proposed redundancies target science, engineering and IT – disciplines supposedly favoured by funding reforms
Analysis of Australian job advertisements points to recovery, particularly in non-traditional research
While the dangers can be extreme in autocracies and war zones, nowhere is immune