Research commercialisation is emerging as the key political battleground for Australian higher education, with both major political parties highlighting it in their pitches to universities.
Education minister Alan Tudge was due to announce measures to boost industry-university collaboration at the undergraduate level during an address to the Universities Australia (UA) conference in Canberra. Meanwhile, shadow education minister Tanya Plibersek was set to tout the Labor opposition鈥檚 proposed A$15 billion (拢8.2 billion) 鈥渘ational reconstruction fund鈥 as a response to the sector鈥檚 鈥渃ry for help鈥 from pandemic devastation.
When the fund was unveiled in March, it was presented as a tonic for Australian car, train and ship manufacturing. Governed by an independent board, it would provide capital in partnership with superannuation funds and other private sector investors.
In a prepared speech to the UA conference, Ms Plibersek was due to highlight the fund鈥檚 role in commercialising university research. 鈥淸It] can help translate your brilliant discoveries and inventions into new Australian businesses and new Australian jobs,鈥 the speech says.
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鈥淭o take our resources and then use our skill and invention to transform them into other, more sophisticated products: as a nation, we haven鈥檛 done this as well as we should.鈥
Mr Tudge, who will reconfirm research commercialisation as the 鈥渢op priority鈥 in his portfolio, was due to announce a 鈥渟hort review鈥 to foster undergraduate students鈥 engagement with business.
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Led by outgoing RMIT University vice-chancellor Martin Bean and recently departed Victoria University boss Peter Dawkins, it will 鈥渄evelop ideas to create closer university-industry collaboration in teaching and learning and to further ensure future graduates are work-ready鈥.
鈥淭his review will consider how we can get more students to have industry experience, and potentially count that experience as credit towards their qualification,鈥 Mr Tudge鈥檚 speech says.
The government鈥檚 review of university research commercialisation will be completed in the 鈥渘ext few months鈥, the speech says. It notes the 鈥渟trong consensus emerging about the need to do more in this space鈥, with widespread support for a 鈥渟tage-gate funding model鈥 for projects that are largely 鈥渋ndustry-driven鈥.
The speech also flags potential legislation against universities that have not embraced Australia鈥檚 model code on free speech and academic freedom. Some 33 universities are now aligned with the code and 鈥渢he sky did not fall in鈥, Mr Tudge will tell the sector.
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鈥淚 want to see the model code implemented fully this year, with no more excuses. I will examine all options available to the government to enforce it.鈥
Mr Tudge will concede that he cannot say when Australia鈥檚 borders will reopen to large-scale arrivals of international students. But 鈥渟maller-scale pilots鈥 proposed by the New South Wales and South Australian governments could provide a 鈥渃onfidence boost to the sector鈥.
The 鈥渁ggregate impact鈥 from border closures 鈥渉as not been as great as many expected鈥, his speech says, with overseas enrolment down by 11 per cent and overall revenue by 3 per cent compared with 2019 鈥 although 鈥渟ome universities have been harder hit than others鈥, and 鈥渃ommencements are down far more than the aggregate decline鈥.
Ms Plibersek will accuse Canberra of letting international education wither after the government 鈥渄awdled鈥 on vaccination and quarantine. 鈥淭his government treats our best services export and our fourth largest export industry鈥ike a problem to be managed, not a treasured asset to be encouraged,鈥 her speech says.
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鈥淚f you were coal, iron ore or natural gas, you鈥檇 be treated very differently.鈥
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