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International education:Challenges and opportunities

Hon. Phil HoneywoodChief Executive Officer, IEAA

IRU Senior Leaders Forum, July 2019

Much to celebrate

• Headline figure 2018: $35.2 billion p.a.• Makes politicians take notice

• Reaching 700,000 international students• On track for projected 1 million by 2025?

• University rankings continue to support our teaching quality reputation

• Relative to other destinations:safe, welcoming, culturally diverse and clean environment

Much to celebrate

• Strong legislative protections supporting international students

• Attractive work rights and post-study work rights (PSWR) opportunities

• Record Government and Institution expenditure on study abroad

• Enhanced research collaboration between China/India diaspora

Increasing challenges

• Lack of market diversification

• Increased competition from traditional/non-traditional competitors

• Rising tensions with China and slowing Chinese economy

• Concerns re: quality of growth in some other key markets

Increasing challenges

• Enrolment growth too concentrated on:• Small range of courses

• Small number of major cities, and

• Onshore, rather than offshored delivery (e.g. TNE)

• School sector not achieving its potential pipeline benefits

• Study abroad mostly accessed by wealthy families

• National security filters on PhD candidates offshore

InternationalRecruitment

7

The global contextAustralia’s positioning

8

Other OECD countries26%

Non-OECDcountries30%

United States19%

Australia7%

United Kingdom9%

Approximately 5 million tertiarystudents studyabroad

Education at a Glance 2018 (OECD)

Australia is the

in the world.

third mostpopulareducationdestination Germany

5%

France5%

Australia’s global positioning

Total enrolmentsYTD March 2019

9

Source: Department of Education and Training (YTD March 2019)

NATIONALITY NSW VIC QLD SA WA TAS NT ACT TOTAL % GROWTH

China 73,288 66,699 23,303 11,270 6,036 3,772 264 8,330 192,962 5.5%

India 23,617 44,525 11,783 5,400 6,101 1,413 330 1,070 94,239 39%

Nepal 30,997 7,967 4,151 1,401 1,203 689 437 340 47,185 46%

Vietnam 7,535 9,441 1,989 1,525 1,097 405 118 299 22,409 3%

Brazil 11,193 2,511 6,842 402 1,208 158 36 47 22,397 4%

Malaysia 5,076 10,622 2,006 1,244 2,319 546 28 318 22,159 -5%

South Korea 8,522 3,231 4,394 744 740 200 27 283 18,141 -3%

Colombia 5,284 5,818 3,755 242 823 60 24 83 16,089 20.5%

Indonesia 7,772 5,338 829 240 827 111 98 255 15,470 9.5%

Thailand 8,706 4,315 1,572 142 395 52 22 90 15,294 -8%

Other 59,900 51,517 32,993 7,782 14,709 2,608 874 2,997 173,380 6%

TOTAL 241,890 211,984 93,617 30,392 35,458 10,014 2,258 14,112 639,725 11%

NATIONALITY NSW VIC QLD SA WA TAS NT ACT TOTAL % GROWTH

China 21,878 19,474 7,880 3,411 1,806 1,194 74 2,000 57,717 1.5%

India 6,615 13,459 3,679 2,014 2,110 534 94 287 28,792 50%

Nepal 7,633 2,499 1,191 500 432 254 85 121 12,715 27.5%

Brazil 3,542 902 2,323 172 479 105 16 15 7,554 -5.5%

Vietnam 2,358 2,997 675 510 329 174 35 74 7,152 13%

Malaysia 1,305 3,075 499 363 734 117 5 82 6,180 -9.5%

Colombia 1,956 2,227 1,461 99 360 24 11 37 6,175 16.5%

South Korea 2,435 1,150 1,486 284 267 91 7 92 5,812 -3%

United States 2,215 711 1,303 103 271 39 5 39 4,686 -0.3%

Thailand 2,103 1,390 549 51 136 17 9 30 4,285 -6%

Other 19,492 17,933 10,812 2,677 5,344 781 269 968 58,276 8%

TOTAL 71,532 65,817 31,858 10,184 12,268 3,330 610 3,745 199,344 9.6%

Total commencementsYTD March 2019

10

Source: Department of Education and Training (YTD March 2019)

Sector by sectorChina vs other nationalities

11

Source: Department of Education and Training (YTD enrolments, December 2018)

Higher education VET ELICOS Non-award SchoolsChina 152712 22341 47762 19419 13662Other nationalities 246,366 221,946 108,607 30445 13139

0

50,000

100,000

150,000

200,000

250,000

300,000

350,000

400,000

450,000

9%

30%

38%

38% 38%

51%

The diversity challenge / opportunity

• Austrade promotes Africa, Home Affairs does not

• LATAM students want ELICOS and hospitality diplomas,but return home for higher education

• Koreans, Singaporeans now look to China

• Vietnamese look to Japan

• Will we become just another postgrad study destination?

• Are we maximising TNE opportunities?

• Do we ramp up offshore pipeline school partnerships?

Policy andRegulation

13

Regulation

• Recently introduced new National Code, ELICOS standards• Working on National Standards for Foundation Programs

• Peter Noonan AQF review looking at micro-credentials

• Peter Coaldrake Provider Category Review:• Potential for teaching only universities?

• Home Affairs working group on transferring academic progress risk

Regulation

• DE transparency on agent visa approval performance and unique agent identifier

• DE initiative re: onshore visa refusals risk rating

• Still require stricter poaching regulations!

Regional spotlightTop 10 regions for international students

16

Source: Department of Education and Training (YTD December 2018)

1. Hobart (TAS)2. Darwin (NT)3. Cairns (QLD)4. Toowoomba (QLD)5. Townsville (QLD)6. Richmond - Tweed (NSW)7. New England and North West (NSW)8. Launceston and North East (TAS)9. Ballarat (VIC)10. Geelong (VIC)

Other locations

9,391 (35%)2,625 (10%)2,475 (10%)2,038 (8%)1,860 (7%)1,554 (6%)1,427 (5%)1,389 (5%)1,119 (4%)

323 (1%)2,458 (9%)

Top 10 regions for international enrolmentsJust over 3% of onshore international students chose to study at a regional institution in 2018.

Growing the regions

• Rapid growth in capital cities has led to infrastructure constraints (i.e. Melbourne, Sydney)

• Greater push to encourage students into the regions

• National Council discussion paper: Growing international education in regional Australia

• Destination Australia population policy released in March 2019:

• Extends post-study work rights (PSW) from 2 to 3 years for regional students

• More than 1000 x AU$15,000 p.a. regional scholarships for domestic/international students

• Greater support for study clusters

• Retains points for state/regional sponsored migration

• More coordinated approach to marketing regional attributes.

International education in regional Australia

17

Governance framework

• Established in 2016, in response to an external review of the sector (Chaney Report)

• The first of its type in the world, it comprises:

• 6 Federal Ministers

• 11 non-ministerial members – including the President of CISA

• Facilitates better coordination between various Government departmentsand encourages a collaborative response to important issues:

• Student visa system, teaching and learning standards, safe affordable accommodation, employability etc.

• Most State Governments now also have advisory councils.

National Council for International Education

18

Governance framework

• The Council has responsibility for implementing Australia’s first National Strategy for International Education

• Structured around the three pillars:

• Strengthening the fundamentals

• Making transformative connections

• Competing globally

• Includes funding of AUD12 million over four years through its ‘Enabling Growth and Innovation (EGI)’ grants program.

National Strategy for International Education 2025

19

Council prioritiesPriorities for 2019 (and beyond)

20

• Delivering the best possible student experience

• A nationally coordinated approach to marketing and branding

• Building in-country engagement and activities

• Communicating the benefits of international education.

Expert membersKey priorities for 2019

21

• Engagement with regional Australia

• Addressing workplace exploitation

• Advancing engagement with Latin America

• New approaches to engagement with key existing partners (China, India)

• Increasing engagement with the schools, English language and vocational education and training sectors.

Working groups

In August 2018, provided expert members with a number of proposals to better support international students in:

• Workplace exploitation

• Student accommodation

• Pre-departure information

• Employability

• Fostering linkages betweenint’l students & local communities.

• Developed a framework to better facilitate co-operation between states and territories and between providers offshore.

• This will now be taken forward through Austrade’s International Education Marketing Forum.

22

Student services Marketing & collaboration

Country specific working groups

• To focus on market opportunities to expand and diversify education engagement with China.

• Currently preparing final report for Expert Members outlining new opportunities for future engagement and collaboration.

• To consult with the Australian education sector on implementing the outcomes of the India Economic Strategy (IES).

• To identify additional opportunities to further strengthen Australia’s engagement with India in education, training and research.

• To develop strategies to progress opportunities and outcomes outlined above.

23

China India

StudentRetention

24

The curriculum/employability challenge

• Business/commerce dominate, particularly for Chinese students

• Employers increasingly want graduates who can stimulate ideas and generate creative solutions

• Future work opportunities will increasingly be in start-ups, SMEs, self-generated enterprises and projects

• China now embracing next generation industries from entertainment and leisure, to healthcare and smart technologies

• Evolved from Level 1-type courses based around a core discipline, to Level 2 postgrad

• India, Nepal, Pakistan: migration pull factor

Barriers to international student employability

Australia’s post-study work rights Top 5 markets: PSWR visa grant holders

01

-

2,000

4,000

6,000

8,000

10,000

12,000

14,000

16,000

2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18

India China Nepal Pakistan Vietnam

Australia’s post-study work rights Growth in postgraduate enrolments following PSWR

0160.1% 55.8% 54.1% 52.9% 50.9% 48.8%

39.9% 44.2% 45.9%47.1%

49.1%51.2%

0

100,000

200,000

300,000

400,000

500,000

2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

Undergraduate Postgraduate

Comparison of international work rightsInternational student work rights in key markets

ATTRACTION RANKING

IN-STUDY WORK

POST-STUDY WORK(Years)

MINIMUM STUDY(Years)

BACHELOR MASTERS(Coursework)

PhD

1. New Zealand Yes 1–3 1 3 3 3

2. Canada Yes 3 2 3 3 3

3. Australia Yes 2–4 2 2 2 4

4. Germany Yes 1.5 n/a 1.5 1.5 1.5

5. United States Yes 1* 1 1 1 1

6. Netherlands Yes 1 1 1 1 1

7. Ireland Yes 0.5–2 2 0.5–1 2 2

8. Sweden Yes 0.5 1 0.5 0.5 0.5

9. United Kingdom Yes 0.3–1 1 0.3 0.3–0.5 1

* +2 years for STEM graduates

Comprehensive student service delivery

• Correct information provided pre-departure

• Integration initiatives with domestic students

• Opportunities for offshore learning abroad

• Mental health, legal advice, counselling services

• Safe, affordable purpose-built student accommodation

• Industry and wider community engagement

• Research scholarship options

#ieaaworldatwork

IDP student perceptions 2018There was little change in IDP student perceptions in 2018 reflecting the general landscape

Thank you

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