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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Researchers face a lean Christmas as veto fiasco triggers more delays
Australian universities may have to wait months to find out how much funding they will forfeit
New centre could supply the ingredients to bring home-grown Fields medallists back, says director
Universities criticise source of new cash splash
Research reportedly picking up the tab for Australian government’s regional cash splash
Higher education delivering solid returns, but vocational education could leave women worse off
Country is on the verge of achieving its now scrapped enrolment target, years before the deadline
Nuanced signals suggest a long-haul future for world’s biggest market
A downturn last decade offers a textbook example of the risk universities face, say Melbourne researchers
Representative organisation criticises vice-chancellors’ aversion to sharing funding with vocational education
The Australian government has released three major data sets unusually back-to-back and full of mistakes, leading John Ross to ask: why so much, why so fast and why so erroneous?
Response to row over vetoing of humanities grants could result in curiosity-driven scholarship being pushed out
Many students who do not complete their course at the first attempt often return to their studies, say experts
Australia’s freeze on teaching grants protected struggling institutions, not education budget
Record revenue fuelled by large foreign intakes at the country’s biggest universities
Regional institutions hardest hit as domestic cap dovetails with intense competition for foreigners
Graduates from some of the least prestigious institutions perform most strongly in the jobs market
Latest tweaks to Australian research grant rules will just add to paperwork, critics say
Shorter courses also an important enticement for learners from the subcontinent
Education minister refuses to rule out future interventions in grant awarding process
We can’t deliver equivalent teaching with less preparation time and resources, RMIT academics say
Applications and offers tumble for the first time this decade
NUS vice-provost on crusade against built-in obsolescence
Storm of protest across academia against Simon Birmingham's scuttling of humanities grants worth A$4.2 million (?2.3 million)