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Lukewarm response on combined compacts

Collective compact negotiations would defeat the purpose, academics argue. Academics have given a lukewarm response to a recommendation that the Victorian government become involved in university compact negotiations “to ensure that the needs of the state are considered”. The expert ...

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Northern exposure

Austrade and AEI are targeting the upper end of the international education market by sending Australian researchers to top-end European universities. Austrade may be grappling with the challenge of maintaining entry-level enrolments from key markets like India and China as ...

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Build hubs, says Baird

Every capital could have a designated centre where international students can find help, info, friends and a representative voice. The federal, state and territory governments should establish international student hubs where international students can obtain information on services and safety, ...

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Austrade to promote more than enrolments

Austrade will be well up to speed on international education when it takes the promotional baton from Australian Education International. Austrade will have plenty of experience under its belt when it assumes responsibilities for promoting and marketing international education in ...

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Play to our international strengths: Davidson

Australia should work to attract foreign PhDs, but it should also accept that its strengths in international education lie at the lower end of the higher education spectrum. Australia should chase foreign enrolments in high-level degrees, but not at the ...

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Shortage of learning specialists

Are VET learning specialists an endangered species, asks John Mitchell. There are nearly 10 times more commercial specialists in the VET sector than specialists in learning and assessment. More pointedly, the number of learning specialists is very low, at 2.4 ...

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Watch this teaching space

The trend towards peer review of teaching is simply a reaction to the current debate on how to assess quality of teaching. It should have been on the agenda years ago, writes David Woodhouse. When I was a dean in ...

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