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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Parliamentary debate on proposal to limit learners’ lifetime borrowing deferred for at least six weeks
A Senate showdown looms on the government’s proposal to trim ballooning student debt
Coalition government back-pedals on a bill to impose lifetime borrowing caps on learners
Vice-chancellors have ‘no authority’, says outgoing Melbourne head Glyn Davis
University finances artificially inflated by government’s failed attempt to cut funding earlier this decade
US-Australian study finds that older students in classes have a better chance of entering higher education
While supervisors say protracted shifts are a crucial part of medical education, new research finds no benefit
Demonstrations opposing ‘biggest cut’ to higher education funding planned in five major cities
Fixation with students’ scores on national ATAR scale constrains teaching innovation in schools, says report
An expanding research misconduct investigation has stretched its net from the chilly Baltic to an idyllic Queensland island and the grasslands of Saskatchewan
Most international students who stay in Australia after they graduate cannot find jobs in their fields
Opposition of Labor and Greens means that measure proposed in December's mid-year budget update is unlikely to pass
Perth’s Murdoch University backs away from radical move to reboot staff conditions
Benefits appear to come from exposure to campus life rather than quality teaching, Australian researchers find
Latest skirmish in war of words sparked by claims of Chinese meddling on Australian campuses, and Canberra’s new foreign interference laws
Programme closures at Australian Catholic University are more disruptive than previously realised
Impact of diplomatic tensions between the two countries may yet be to bite
Brexit has provided the ‘stimulation’ for higher education institutions in the two countries to ramp up their relationship
Higher education institutions make a loss when they invest in international partnerships, but the wider community reaps a windfall, says New Zealand report
Data released amid concern that tensions with China may lead to future downturn in recruitment
The government is wrong to portray campus surpluses as ‘slush funds’, says expert
Growth in Chinese admissions exclusively among applicants already in country
Diplomatic dinner celebrating US-Australian relations is only the entrée to a full-blown battle over funding cuts that has put the demand-driven system on ice, says John Ross
But Labor’s Tanya Plibersek fuels concerns that funding could be diverted to further education