Industry figures are asking how long current tuition assurance arrangements can hold up. An accelerating failure rate among international colleges is putting Australia’s struggling tuition assurance arrangements under unprecedented strain, according to new figures revealed to international education peak bodies ...
More »Tuition assurance mechanisms struggling
The real question may not be whether Australia’s tuition assurance mechanisms should be replaced, new college closure figures suggest. It may be whether they can survive in the meantime. The failure rate of international colleges is increasing and Australia’s tuition ...
More »Queensland to cut 200 TAFE jobs
Queensland’s TAFE downsizing is because of reduced demand in the gun resource state, says the education department boss. Queensland plans to cut 200 TAFE teaching and administrative positions across the state in areas it says have been hit by reduced ...
More »Physical campuses and the pull towards virtual space
Is campus-based education doomed? Looks that way, and that’s why online universities need to be part of the demand-driven system, says <<<Stuart Hamilton>>>. I hope the traditional university campus experience will continue to be available for those who want it ...
More »Where do the dual-sectors fit in?
Some dismiss dual-sectors as nothing more than institutionalised frameworks for sectoral brawling. But they’re generating plenty of interest, says <<<Leesa Wheelahan>>>. Dual-sectors are going to get their moment in the sun because of changes to tertiary education. However, this presents ...
More »A new Victorian era?
Victorian-style VET for Australia? Not necessarily in all respects, say the experts. Are the federal budget VET reforms an attempt to impose the Victorian VET model on the rest of the country? And if so, is that a good thing? ...
More »Looking beyond the My Skills website
Which training providers are not afraid of the MySkills website, asks John Mitchell. Following the media profile given to the MySchool website, there was no sense of public surprise when the government announced in the budget that it would allocate ...
More »Is the East rising?
The rise and rise of higher education in Asia, particularly in China, has given rise to speculation that a common higher education zone could eventually become a reality. Not for quite some time, says Simon Marginson. There is without doubt ...
More »Have green skills become browned off?
The focus on green skills may be politically popular, but maybe is it really addressing the changing needs of the workforce? By Tom Karmel I’m not sure whether the metaphor in the headline is appropriate given how green the countryside ...
More »Trouble at mill
Some PhD and supervisor relationships are not perfect. And there might be incidences of bullying. But let’s get some perspective, writes Joseph Gora. Do I detect the whiff of hysteria in relation to the issue of bullying in higher education? ...
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