Australia鈥檚 education minister has asked universities to reserve accommodation for students from rural areas, as part of its response to an independent review of regional education.
The federal government reacted on 30 May to warnings that the skyrocketing costs and limited availability of housing were deterring rural people from degree-level study.
Its intervention comes after an headed by former education bureaucrat John Halsey found that regional people were disproportionately affected by housing costs 鈥 which could exceed A$25,000 (拢14,000) a year per student 鈥 and that on-campus accommodation was being snapped up by international students.
The government said that regional people鈥檚 options were also stymied by opaque information about housing. Education minister Simon Birmingham said that he had asked university leaders to 鈥渋ncrease the transparency鈥 of their student accommodation options and to guarantee places for regional, rural and remote students.
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鈥淭here鈥檚 clearly a gap between the city and the bush in the level of study or qualifications students achieve,鈥 he said.
The government will also requisition funds from its key equity funding scheme, the Higher Education Participation and Partnerships Programme, to pay for an annual assessment of the support that universities provide for regional people transitioning from high school.
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It said that the results would be published on its Quality Indicators of Learning and Teaching website, starting next year.
The government 聽that it had accepted all 11 recommendations of Dr Halsey鈥檚 report. It had already committed to some of the key suggestions in this month鈥檚 budget, which allocated almost A$100 million to fund several proposals.
They included relaxing the eligibility criteria for rural students seeking income support payments, and subsidising hundreds of places at eight regionally located 鈥渟tudy hubs鈥. The budget also funded about 500 pathway places for rural students.
Canberra has also backed Dr Halsey鈥檚 key recommendation that it establish a national focus for regional, rural and remote education. It said that vocational colleges as well as universities stood to benefit, with training providers likely to receive access to funding from regional grants programmes.
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The Regional Universities Network said that the national focus was a 鈥渇irst step鈥, but that more resources were required. Chair Greg Hill said that the government needed to restore the demand-driven higher education funding system 鈥 and extend it to sub-bachelor qualifications 鈥 to boost opportunities for regional students and their communities.
Professor Hill said that while the government had supported the inquiry鈥檚 recommendations, it had not committed to some of the specific 鈥渁ctions鈥 endorsed by Dr Halsey. They included formulating a national regional education strategy 鈥 with an associated taskforce 鈥 and funding a 鈥渞enewing the regions鈥 education and training initiative for at least five years.
鈥淩egional higher education is a major contributor to economic, social and cultural development,鈥 he said. 鈥淎 more coordinated strategy could facilitate better outcomes.鈥
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