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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Veteran administrator calls for Excellence in Research for Australia workload and frequency to be slashed
STEM-focused university warns that looming fee and subsidy changes may sharpen pandemic’s bite
New ARC funding arrangements will also redirect more money to applied research
Higher education well down the priority pecking order as resounding Labour win pushes policy into the centre
Sydney PhD graduate reflects on how his surprise disability gave rise to an academic career and better prospects for fellow sufferers
Neoliberal administrators’ policing of institutional reputations and academic colleagues’ condemnation of dissenting voices on issues such as race and gender have led to claims that scholars are losing their ability to engage in free enquiry and open debate. But is academic freedom really the operative concept in the controversies that arise? John Ross probes a highly contested debate
Colleagues remain baffled at security bureau’s exclusion of Australian literature expert
Be more candid about the nature of your foreign collaborations and think about your own moral responsibilities, Australian parliamentarians warn universities
V-c says university’s in-house ‘assurance and enhancement’ led to identification and resolution of international flaws
Wellington to allow overseas learners back earlier than expected, but only a select few will qualify
Vice-chancellor faces fresh charges of acting outside authority after old allegations deemed not ‘material’
At least start processing visas, foreign students beg, as treasury defers hopes of students’ return
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