Skip to content
Education Training, Government Federal

International Student Cap Announcement Creates More Questions Than Answers

Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia (ITECA) 2 mins read

Independent skills training and higher education providers which supported more than 57% of all international student enrolments in Australia in 2023 require more detail on what the Australian Government is proposing with respect to international student allocations for next year.  That’s the view of the Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia (ITECA) following feedback from members.

In an announcement today, the Australian Government has advised that subject to the passage of legislation before the parliament, it will set a National Planning Level (NPL) for new international student commencements of 270,000 for calendar year 2025.  The NPL is divided between the higher education and international education sectors.

“On one hand, the establishment of the National Planning Level is welcome but what’s required is further advice to providers on what it means to them,” said Troy Williams, ITECA Chief Executive.

For independent universities and for non-university higher education providers, in aggregate, their new international student commencements in 2025 will be a total of 30,000.  For the skills training sector, the limit is understood to be 95,000 new international student commencements in 2025.

“The sector-wide limits need to be accompanied by immediate and precise information to ITECA members about what it means for them in their context.  They need this so they can provide meaningful advice to their staff whether they will still have jobs and to intending students seeking news on the possibility of them being able to study in Australia next year,” Mr Williams said.

ITECA is critical of the Australian Government’s approach to international education which has been drip fed through the media rather than through meaningful engagement with the sector.

“Right now, when contemplating the future of their institution and the jobs of their staff, all our members have is a government media release.  This is a less than satisfactory state of affairs,” Mr Williams said.

ITECA has sought urgent clarification from the Australian Government on the detail of its announcement so that institution-level data can be provided to its members in the skills training and higher education sectors.

Ends.

Troy Williams - High Resolution Photograph
[Download]


Contact details:

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

Media

More from this category

  • Education Training
  • 23/12/2024
  • 12:46
NSW Department of Education

Surf safety focus as parents hit the waves

Parents fromHomebush West Public School were taught to be safe in the surf ahead of the summer holidays. When the father of a student…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Government Federal
  • 20/12/2024
  • 11:18
Australian Conservation Foundation

Assess NT fracking under national environment law

Concerns raised by an independent expert scientific committee should prompt Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek to use her expanded water trigger powers to assess Northern Territory gas fracking proposals, the Australian Conservation Foundation said. While the ‘plain English summary’ of the Expert Scientific Committee on Unconventional Gas says the potential impacts on the Beetaloo Basin’s water resources from exploration activities would be ‘minor’, that description is not used in the rest of the report. The panel states that exploration activities ‘will likely lead to further production, exploration and appraisal which will inevitably intensify impacts.’ “The whole purpose of initial gas fracking…

  • Government Federal, Transport Automotive
  • 20/12/2024
  • 10:20
The Climate Council

New year, new gear: New Vehicle Efficiency Standard revs off the starting line at the stroke of midnight

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE FRIDAY 20TH DECEMBER 2024 New year, new gear: New Vehicle Efficiency Standard revs off the starting line at the stroke of midnight The Albanese Government’s New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES) that will come into effect on January 1 will see cleaner and cheaper to run cars sold in Australia, cutting climate pollution produced by new cars by more than half. The policy is a huge win for our climate, our health and our hip-pockets, preventing 20 million tonnes of climate pollution by 2030. For more than two decades, uptake of low- and zero-emissions vehicles was held back…

  • Contains:

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.