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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Articles by John Ross 网曝门>
New report warns presentation of discounts as ‘scholarships’ is driving ‘race to the bottom’
Western Australian capital seeks regional redefinition in hope of benefiting from new incentive schemes
New category would give top colleges bragging rights and a platform to upgrade to university status
‘Overblown’ media reports focus on state control over students and perils of joint research
Piggybacking on free trade negotiations could remove administrative hurdles and discourage ‘lone wolf’ researchers
The cultural studies scholar reflects on Tiananmen Square, the experience of Chinese students in Australia, and why online education can never replace a sage on the stage
Candid self-appraisals lend weight to doubts about English capabilities of learners coming to Australia
Results of early assignments can make or break students’ determination to continue their studies, Australian research suggests
AI technology could help save people from the encroaching predators – and vice-versa
Australian study also finds that dodgy agents are exploiting a migration advice ‘loophole’
Concerns about student visa scheme’s integrity prompt methodological adjustment
Athena SWAN recognition extended to 13 more Australian institutions
Episode spotlights concerns for safety of scholars who visit repressive regimes
‘Systemic barriers’ hinder universities’ efforts to tackle the territory’s major problems, says report
Usha Goswami’s work has allowed educators ‘to arm themselves with scientific understanding’
Funding scholarships rather than a whole new course ‘would benefit hundreds more students’
Monash union election called off at last minute following criticism
Departure is latest example of intermittent campus disruption from broader protest movement
Australian report warns against fetish for interdisciplinarity, citing increasing specialisation of subfields
University of Canberra, QUT and UNSW Sydney the standout performers in a rising field
With US-style personal contributions and Scandinavian-style payoffs, Australians have the worst of both worlds, suggests Education at a Glance
French-born scientist’s discoveries explained the organising principle of the adaptive immune system
Average remuneration hits A$982,900 (?543,800), Times Higher Education analysis shows
Widening chasm between sciences and humanities scholarship not found in other countries