Skip to content
Education Training

Flat enrolments in university-level physics and persistent gender gaps

Australian Institute of Physics 2 mins read

An Australian Undergraduate Physics Participation Report, released today by the Australian Institute of Physics (AIP), reveals steady enrolment levels in university-level physics-major programs and persistent gender gaps.

Physics training is critical to supporting Australia's scientific research, high-tech industries, and innovation capacity. A healthy pipeline of students enrolling in university-level physics is therefore a matter of national importance.

Key findings of the report:

  1. The number of students studying a physics subject at first-year level remained broadly stable from 2019–2023.
  2. Approximately 14,000 students per year study at least one physics subject at first-year university level.
  3. Most first-year enrolments are from students not intending to major in physics, reflecting the important role of physics as a service subject for engineering and other science degrees.
  4. Approximately 750 students per year complete a physics major at third-year university level.
  5. Female representation in the physics major stream is consistently around 21–23% across all year levels, with no meaningful trend toward parity.

The female participation is in line with trends observed in Year 12 level physics, where women consistently make up around one quarter of students.

Physics training underpins occupations as diverse as engineering, defence, finance, healthcare and advanced computing, and develops critical thinking and quantitative reasoning skills. It also positions students to contribute to pressing challenges ahead, including the transition to clean energy, the responsible development of artificial intelligence, and the development of next-generation materials.

Female Percentage of undergraduate physics enrolments

Female Percentage of undergraduate physics enrolments

Read the full report here: https://aip.org.au/resources/Documents/Advocacy/AIP_Report_on_Undergrad_Enrolments_at_Australian_Universities_(June_2026).pdf

— Professor Nicole Bell, on behalf of the Australian Institute of Physics Executive.


About us:

The Australian Institute of Physics (AIP) is a organisation dedicated to promoting the role of physics in research, education, industry and the community. 


Contact details:

Karen Siu, AIP Operations Manager, 0478 260 533, [email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • Education Training, General News
  • 30/06/2026
  • 09:22
House of Representatives

Security and Prosperity in Asia: Building Australia’s Asia Capability

TheHouse of Representatives Standing Committee on Educationhas presented the ‘Security and Prosperity in Asia: Building Australia’s Asia capability’ report of itsinquiry into building Asia capability in Australiathrough the education system and beyond. Committee Chair,Hon Tim Watts MP, said “Australia faces its most challenging strategic environment since the Second World War. Our security and prosperity are intertwined with our region. While Australian statecraft in Asia has never been more active than it is today, the pipeline building the capability that enables it is in crisis,”MrWatts said. The Committee found that a key issue affecting the current teaching of Asian languages and…

  • Community, Education Training
  • 29/06/2026
  • 09:32
Charles Darwin University

Charles Darwin University launches search for next Vice-Chancellor and President

Charles Darwin University (CDU) has commenced the search for its next Vice-Chancellor and President, seeking an outstanding leader to guide the University through its…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, Government Federal
  • 29/06/2026
  • 07:17
Dr Monique Ryan, Independent Federal Member for Kooyong

Australian Universities and Unions Back $3.2bn plan to Fix HECS

Today, Dr Monique Ryan will introduce a Private Member’s Bill into Parliament to change the date of HECS indexation, and make the student debt system fairer for millions of Australian students and graduates. Dr Ryan’s Bill has drawn widespread support from across the tertiary education sector, with leading officials from major universities and Australia’s peak representative body for higher education students expressing their support. Earlier this month, Dr Ryan released Parliamentary Budget Office costings showing that students and graduates would save $3.2 billion in indexation over 10 years if its date was changed from 1 June to 1 November. Indexation…

  • 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.