Skip to content
Education Training

Universities Accord Interim Report – More to be done to back students

Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia 2 mins read

The interim report from the Australian Universities Accord Panel has received a mixed response from the peak body representing independent providers in the higher education, skills training and international education sectors, the Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia (ITECA).

Higher education is pivotal in shaping Australia’s future, empowering individuals with knowledge, fostering innovation, and nurturing critical thinking.  To be its best, it needs reform that positions it as a catalyst for progress and a beacon of hope for a prosperous future.  This transformation needs to put students at the heart of the higher education system, and the interim report doesn’t do this,” said Troy Williams, ITECA Chief Executive.

ITECA has cautiously welcomed the consideration given to a ‘Universal Learning Entitlement’ set out in the interim report; however, it believes that the approach could be broadened.

“ITECA’s priority is to ensure that student choice is at the centre of higher education funding, allowing a student to access a government-supported place quality institution of their choice.  This would see a significant expansion of the funding system to allow most students to study with independent higher education institutions if that was their decision,” Mr Williams said.

The interim report from the Australian Universities Accord Panel takes a considered approach to closer integration of the higher education and skills training sectors, which ITECA welcomes.

“ITECA has been a strong proponent for a more cohesive tertiary education framework in which the higher education and skills training systems operate as one but retain their separate strengths and identities.  The interim report makes some positive steps in this regard,” Mr Williams said,

The option of creating a “Tertiary Education Commission” raised by the Australian Universities Accord Panel has merit, but requires further consideration in ITECA’s view.

“The utility of any such body is to look at the entirety of post-secondary education in Australia and place equal value on the ability of the higher education and skills training sectors to support a culture of lifelong learning,” Mr Williams said.

ITECA continues to believe that the fundamental focus of the government’s reform agenda is misguided.

“The Australian Universities Accord needs to recognise the complementarity of independent and public higher education providers, with a refreshed name – a higher education accord – and fresh policy approaches that are agnostic as to provider type,” Mr Williams said.

The development of the Accord is a critical issue for independent higher education institutions that support more than 10% of the 1.6 million students in a higher education awards program.


Key Facts:

The interim report from the Australian Universities Accord Panel will set the framework for the Australian Government's higher education reform agenda.

ITECA believes that the interim framework from the panel isn't student centric and doesn't appropriately back students that want to student with independent higher education providers.


Contact details:

Troy Williams - ITECA Chief Executive
e: troy.williams@iteca.edu.au
m: 0400 599 934

Media

More from this category

  • Education Training, General News
  • 15/11/2024
  • 13:59
MissingSchool

Solving chronic school absence: MissingSchool’s Megan Gilmour named 2025 Australian of the Year for the ACT

Meet the global education ambassador and technology trailblazer working to ensure all children are seen and heard Announced at a ceremony last night (14 November 2024),MissingSchool co-founder and CEO Megan Gilmouris the 2025 Australian of the Year for the ACT. The awardrecognises her leadership of the first organisation in Australia to address chronic school absence forchildren facing medical-mental challenges serious enough to affect their education and wellbeing. Megan now goes into the running for the national accolade to be revealed on 25 January 2025. In Australia, up to one in three school children (1.2 million students) are at risk of…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, Youth
  • 14/11/2024
  • 10:59
Big Picture Learning Australia and UNSW Sydney

Forum: Where now for public schooling in Australia?

Forum: Where now for public schooling in Australia? How can we deliver fulfilling, inclusive and engaging education for every student? Release date: IMMEDIATE RELEASE Date: Friday November 15, 2024, 09:00 – 14:00 Location: John Niland Scientia Building (G19), UNSW Sydney G19 Library Road Kensington, NSW 2052 For a growing number of young Australians, the school system is no longer fit forpurpose. Many feel they don’t belong, and that they’re not learning in the ways the system demands. For others, the curriculum doesn’t engage their interest, or they feel trapped in the classroom when they’d rather be exploring the world. A…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, Information Technology
  • 13/11/2024
  • 07:03
La Trobe University

La Trobe unveils AI-first strategy

La Trobe University has unveiled a bold ambition to transform research, education, student support and business operations by applying an ‘AI-first’ approach, supported by a new partnership with Microsoft Australia and New Zealand and leading cyber security provider CyberCX. Harnessing the unique expertise of each partner, this nation-leading project will deliver an AI-ready workforce of graduates and academics, built on key principles of safety and responsibility. The three-year partnership will fuel the University’s Responsible AI Adoption Strategy to: Integrate AI into curricula to prepare graduates for an AI-ready workforce Encourage staff to embrace an AI-first mindset, training them to use…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.