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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监管机构的报告称,随着在线交付问题的消退,对“论文工厂”的报告达到峰值
First institutional accounts reveal mixed results, with many institutions weathering the Covid storm but some plunging into deficit
Universities Australia not releasing its latest ‘health check’, after the previous one revealed ‘harsh’ perceptions
Equity expert also highlights the risks of competitive grading and the benefits of diverse groupings
With overseas enrolments hitting the buffers during the pandemic, debate rages over whether higher education’s excessive reliance on this income stream is self-inflicted – and how universities can keep themselves on the financial rails in future. John Ross reports
Minister’s suggestion, which has a troubled history, among several medium-term ideas to revive international education
‘Black hat’ techniques from drug sales and information warfare used on students seeking legitimate university services
More pain in store for Australian universities, as bankruptcy beckons the colleges and agencies that scaffold their international operations
Science minister’s replacement could curb momentum on women’s progress in STEM, critics fear
Universities face ban on deals with foreign partners that lack ‘institutional autonomy’, as they wrestle with similar demons
Australian universities’ standing in global league tables may have plateaued
Research projects examining humanitarian crises and school inequality the latest to come under a cloud
Vietnamese analysis of Australian survey data affirms findings about education’s impacts on subjective well-being, but ‘does not settle the argument’
Requirement for trainee doctors to undertake training in the bush has not been enough to keep them there after graduation
Internal vetting found nothing wrong with rejected research projects, vice-chancellors tell parliament’s security committee
‘Ambiguous’ regulations and lack of clarity around national security concerns are keeping universities in the dark, Australian inquiry hears
Lift your game, minister tells Covid-struck universities, as students mark institutions down on engagement
Chinese students becoming more supportive of authoritarian government during time in liberal democracy
With every second institution sporting a new boss, or looking for one, the pool of replacements may be shrinking
New Sydney boss to earn much less than his predecessor – but more than Michael Spence’s current income in the UK
Selling the sector will be a key challenge for the former political adviser, journalist and media administrator chosen to lead Australia’s oldest university
The pandemic may be goading Australia’s stay-at-home students to look further afield for their education, although some of them may ultimately decide to stay put
Educational link ‘as bad as it has ever been’, with billions of dollars at stake for universities
Sector leaders acknowledge ‘errors’ but deny deliberate withholding of pay