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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Women who out-earn male partners need to have significantly higher qualifications, Australian survey suggests
Australian report suggests scholars should ‘focus on areas where AI is ineffective’
As Labor hands EIF potential lifeline, ex-chair of its board says money could insulate HE against international income risks
New analysis charts 40-fold increase in quantity of co-authored papers and 100-fold surge in quality
Stand-off likely to exacerbate concerns over free speech on campus
Landmark development ‘blurs boundaries between education and research’ and aims to deliver work experience for students
Universities should cut enrolments rather than allowing further erosion of base funding rates, expert says
峰会现场报道,机器学习如何辅助学生进步和课程设计——学者应该让人工智能“接管”招生
Forum mulls the merits of external experience, elected leaders and 10-year term limits
In times of conflict it is best to meet students on their own turf, University of Cape Town leader says
Result shows that rankings performance is not one-way traffic, despite fierce international competition
Graduate dissatisfaction also on the rise despite overall positive report card for universities and colleges
Providers squabble over whether to relax rules for university colleges or jettison the category altogether
Universities need flexibility to admit more students and it is wrong to call full-fee places ‘elitist’, deputy v-c argues
对经济形势和毕业生就业能力的担忧推动中国10个省份采取“1+齿证书制度”
Report sheds light on international graduates’ motivations for staying on
Housing and food costs interfering with study, Melbourne study finds
Time running out for clarity on course subsidies, experts warn
Digging in will solve nothing, university presidents say, as protests continue
Increasingly popular repayment system eases stress on graduates and governments alike, says Bruce Chapman
New analyses highlight the risks of over-dependence on single income source
Observers suggest attempts to influence campus affairs – directly or indirectly – might increase after assault on legislature