A suggestion that capping the number of international students in Australia could improve educational quality is not winning support among bodies representing the sector.
The International Education Association of Australia (IEAA), Universities Australia, TAFE Directors Australia, the Australian Council for Private Education and Training and other groups are discussing the idea in meetings this week.
The peak bodies are considering their responses to a discussion paper released in April by a new advisory council to the federal government charged with developing a national strategy for international education. Among the ideas put forward by the International Education Advisory Council (IEAC) is setting targets for a 鈥渟ustainable鈥 number of international students across education sectors.
However, ahead of this week鈥檚 meetings, IEAA executive director Phil Honeywood said the idea needed to come off the table completely. 鈥淚t鈥檚 ironic that at a time when we鈥檙e uncapping places across universities, we鈥檙e discussing potentially capping international students. I don鈥檛 think that鈥檚 what we need at the moment,鈥 Honeywood told Campus Review.
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Although lucrative, the A$15 billion (拢9.4 billion) international education industry has been dealt a multibillion-dollar blow in recent months. In the 25-page discussion paper, the IEAC 鈥 which is chaired by Michael Chaney, who is chancellor of the University of Western Australia and chairman of National Australia Bank 鈥 acknowledges the sector鈥檚 challenges and the widely publicised reasons for its downturn.
As a possible remedy, the paper says that: 鈥淭he council is interested to hear views on whether it is possible or desirable to set national or state and territory and/or institutional targets for a sustainable number of international students across the various education sectors.鈥
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But Honeywood said that caps were not an answer. 鈥淲e would be resistant to having government-imposed caps on international students by institution,鈥 he said. The IEAA was concerned that ambiguous language in the paper also flagged potential over-regulation of transnational education in the public vocational education and training sector and was sending mixed messages.
鈥淭echnical and further education institutes, for example, have been told by Knight [review of international student visas] that鈥檚 where the growth is 鈥 that your future is offshore,鈥 Honeywood said. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 have an amber light; we need to have a green light, with an appropriate regulatory framework.鈥
The 11-member IEAC, which reports to the tertiary education minister, was established last October. It is expected to be a major contributor to the development of a five-year national strategy. However, Honeywood said that the industry had its own ideas for a strategy. 鈥淪ix key international education peak bodies have made significant progress on consensus for a comprehensive international education strategy for Australia. We鈥檙e hopeful that this will result from the Chaney review. However, we鈥檙e keeping our options open based on what comes out,鈥 he said.
The sector widely criticised another international student strategy released by the Council of Australian Governments in 2010 for failing to address the complexity of issues that affect the industry and its students.
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