Skip to content
Education Training, General News

From classrooms to careers: Public hearings on strengthening Australia’s Asia capability

House of Representatives < 1 min read

The House of Representatives Standing Committee on Education will hold two public hearings as a part of its inquiry into building Asia capability in Australia through the education system and beyond.

On Monday, 13 April 2026 the Committee will hear from community language organisations, language educators, and foreign policy experts to better understand how language and cultural learning builds long-term Asia capability in Australia.

On Tuesday 14 April 2026, the public hearing will focus on perspectives from the business community, and examine the skills and capabilities needed to engage effectively with Asian economies. The Committee will hear from business leaders and graduates who will discuss the linkages between the education system and successful careers and engagement in the region. 

Committee Chair, Hon Tim Watts MP, said the hearings ‘will provide valuable insight into how Australia can take a more coordinated and sustained approach to building Asia capability and why this is strategically important’.

‘These hearings will help the Committee understand how education, language skills and community ties can better support Australia’s economic, social and strategic interests,’ Mr Watts said.

Public hearings

Date: Monday, 13 April 2026
Time: 10.30am – 4.15pm
Location: Committee Room 2R1, Parliament House, Canberra

Date: Tuesday, 14 April 2026
Time: 11.00am – 2.15pm
Location: Committee Room 2R1, Parliament House, Canberra

A program for the public hearing is available on the inquiry website. A live broadcast of the hearing will also be available on the APH website.

Media inquiries

Laura Green
Office of Hon Tim Watts MP, Chair
[email protected]
(03) 9687 7661

For background information

Committee Secretariat
02 6277 4573
[email protected]

More from this category

  • General News
  • 14/05/2026
  • 22:10
BitMEX

BitMEX Launches the Copy and Conquer Campaign Featuring a 50,000 USDT Prize Pool

VICTORIA, Seychelles, May 14, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- BitMEX, a leading crypto derivatives exchange, announced today the launch of the Copy and Conquer campaign. Users can copy or reverse copy other leading traders to win their share of a 50,000 USDT prize pool.Copy Trading was introduced on BitMEX for all traders in 2025, with a unique Reverse Copy feature – an advanced function where traders can take the opposite direction of another trader. Copy trading of top Hyperliquid traders is also available, providing users with advanced profit opportunities in the safety of the BitMEX platform.The Copy and Conquer campaign will…

  • General News, Travel Tourism
  • 14/05/2026
  • 07:00
Reflections Holidays

Tiny homes with “the best view” of iconic Australian beach break meet niche travel demand

Key Facts: Please find full suite of images in this link.TWO new beachfront tiny homes with luxe rooftop sun decks and unparalleled views over iconic destination Clarkes Beach and The Pass are turning heads as an “accommodation first” at Reflections Byron Bay and the village of Byron in northern New South Wales. Nick Baker, chief executive officer of Reflections, the largest holiday park group in NSW which reinvests profits back into its holiday parks, said there was growing demand for tiny homes from solo travellers and couples seeking accommodation that was unique, romantic and steeped in understated luxury. “Byron Bay…

  • Culturally and linguistically diverse, General News
  • 14/05/2026
  • 06:00
UNSW Sydney

Lost in translation? Why human expertise still matters in the age of AI

From courtrooms to hospitals, interpreting demands more than language fluency–yet experts warn AI is changing how the profession is understood and valued. When more than 200 interpretation errors emerged in aVictorian Supreme Court trial, the issue was not simply technical. Lawyers argued the mistakes distorted evidence given by an Arabic-speaking witness, raising concerns about fairness in the judicial process. Proceedings continued only after transcripts were reworked with a second interpreter’s review. For those working in translation and interpreting, the case is a stark reminder of what is at stake. While the Victorian case did not involve AI, experts say it…

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.