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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Number crunching based on new research classifications helps pinpoint strengths and failings
Experts lament ‘death by a thousand cuts’ amid fears Covid redundancy schemes could finish off pared back programmes
Reform package hinges on two independent votes, after cross-party committee offered unconvincing endorsement
Australian university to proceed with disputed staff cuts but introduce element of choice
The country would not cancel the visas of Chinese academics without good reason, says banned Australian academic Clive Hamilton
Largely symbolic move comes amid worsening diplomatic ties and after Australia revoked Chinese scholars’ visas
‘Top down’ antipathy feeds broader experience of discrimination, student representatives warn
NSW minister predicts early resumption of student flows, as states and territories develop plans for flights and quarantine
Despite challenging bilateral ties, former Australian foreign ministers say enrolments may prove resilient
Covid-19 has elevated the already considerable cyber risks universities face from without and within, Australian consultants warn
Land swap paves way for new high-rise campus, as sprawl gives way to borderless city vibe
Experts say move against extending free tuition beyond freshers reflects underlying flaws in reform
South Australian party welcomes tweaks to benefit Adelaide universities, but insists it remains uncommitted
Hopes of an unlikely budget windfall may have spurred university chiefs’ change of heart, inquiry hears
Latest revelations continue horror week for the Australian sector
Australian forum hears that reduced ‘flow across borders’ could be an ongoing reality
Latest losses bring national coronavirus tally to about 11,000 jobs, excluding casual and fixed term positions
Australian sector must use ‘radical reset’ opportunity to refocus from grand challenges to the expertise needed to achieve them, says report
Island state university’s stance could prove pivotal, with bill’s future hingeing on Tasmanian senator’s vote
‘Lock in’ funding boosts through legislation and abandon punitive auditing measures, Senate committee submissions say
Chinese translators the latest victims as Australia’s security state applies the thumbscrews
As Australia struggles to defend its civic values from foreign interference, critics say translators’ banning shows those values are being undermined from within
Interstate universities drawn into scandal amid questions over how serial predator kept getting promoted
New developments suggest Covid fallout may not be as devastating as feared for international education flows