Postgraduate students out of the budget… again
Eduardo Jordan (presenter), The Wire
Listen to the interview at: http://thewire.org.au/story/postgraduate-students-budget/
Download: What does the 2018/19 Federal Budget mean for students? – Briefing paper
The Federal Budget for 2018/19 was released on the 8th of May 2018.
CAPA has prepared a briefing paper to detail budget announcements which are of concern to students, and postgraduate students in particular.
Budget 2018: Win for universities, loss for students
Loren Smith, Campus Review
While metropolitan and rural universities alike are, for once, mostly pleased with the Budget, students feel neglected.
Tertiary institutions praised, among other measures, the boost in research funding. At the same time, the Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations (CAPA) lamented the Budget’s lack of income support for domestic research and postgraduate coursework students.
Read more: https://www.campusreview.com.au/2018/05/budget-2018-win-for-universities-loss-for-students/
In this pre-election 2018/19 Federal Budget, the best students can hope for is to be forgotten.
The Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations (CAPA) is disappointed but not surprised that the Government continues to prioritise everything except students.
There are over 400,000 forgotten postgraduate students in Australia, including over 240,000 domestic postgraduate students who are voters. There continues to be no commitment to income support for domestic research students or postgraduate coursework students. We know that the lack of income support is an urgent problem for postgraduate students, yet the Government has completely ignored this issue.
As far as postgraduate students are concerned, the only value in this budget is that the Government has finally committed to funding the 2016 National Research Infrastructure Roadmap. We await details on how this will operate.
In a further example of postgraduate students being totally ignored, the Government’s deals to provide Commonwealth Supported Places to three marginal-seat universities have nothing for future postgraduate students, with all places allocated to study at a Bachelor level or below. These sweetheart deals do little to reverse the damage wreaked by the Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO) cuts to higher education announced just before Christmas last year.
In this budget – the last before a Federal election – the good news is that the latest blows to the higher education sector are not as devastating as they could have been. If these damages are legislated, universities will have to stump up fees if they wish for their students to access loans, as well as shouldering the cost of regulatory body TEQSA within three years.
“Postgraduate students are important contributors to our nation’s research output and will become even more important in the future as we require a highly skilled workforce,” said CAPA national president, Natasha Abrahams. “It is disheartening that postgraduate students have once again been left out of the national agenda.”
For further comment:
CAPA National President
Natasha Abrahams
P: 0430 076 993
Mortgage-scale student debt on the rise in Australia
John Ross, Times Higher Education
The number of Australians with enormous student debts has increased by almost 30 per cent in a year, adding impetus to the government’s drive to rein in lending.
[…]
The Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations said that “penalising students for the cost of their education” was a short-sighted response to the problem. “Imposing a loan balance cap does not address the real problems of ballooning tuition fees and graduates’ difficulties finding stable, fairly paid employment,” said national president Natasha Abrahams.
“If the minister is genuinely concerned that some students are unable to pay back their loans, it would be prudent to examine and address the reasons for this rather than devastate opportunity for future students and rip money from lower-earning graduates.”
Read more: https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/mortgage-scale-student-debt-rise-australia
MEDIA RELEASE: CAPA calls for Government higher education decisions to be about policy, not cuts
The Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations (CAPA) is concerned that higher education policy in Australia is being dictated by the Government’s short-sighted funding cuts, rather than being based on any reasoning about the nation’s current and future needs.
A report published today by the Mitchell Institute forecasts future enrolments in vocational training and undergraduate study. Their report stunningly illustrates the impact of Government funding decisions as flatlining or falling participation rates as a proportion of population.
Over the last six months, we have seen the Government hack away at our enviable higher education system. Before Christmas, universities were subjected to a funding freeze, meaning that universities had to turn away Australians who would otherwise have been accepted into a degree. More recently, the Government has proposed retroactive changes to student loans, which would see lower-earning graduates forced to pay back their student contributions sooner. Meanwhile we have seen no commitment to adequately supporting those who are already in the system. There is no relief in sight for the majority of domestic postgraduate students who are paying extortionate course fees and are ineligible for Austudy entitlements.
Today’s Mitchell Institute report provides a graphic reminder that the Government’s education policy decisions do not consider Australia’s future economic needs. Rather, it is a question of trying to save money in the short-term, at a cost of crippling the system and eliminating equitable access to higher education.
CAPA is furthermore concerned about the upcoming federal budget being utilised to reaffirm the Government’s desire to squeeze money out of young and lower-earning graduates. We call on the Government to premise their higher education decisions on the population’s needs instead of seeing students and universities as an easy target.
For further comment:
CAPA National President
Natasha Abrahams
E: president@capa.edu.au
P: 0430 076 993
Is the Chief Scientist out of touch with what PhDs want?
Loren Smith, Campus Review
Were Finkel’s comments productive, glib, or something in-between? Was he sincere about PhDs wanting to choose their own academic or non-academic paths, or was this a distraction from the fact that the academic job market is evaporating?
[…]
Natasha Abrahams offered a different view. The National President of the Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations (CAPA) thinks that whatever career path post-PhDs select, it doesn’t really matter – at least on a societal level. ‘People undertake doctoral study for a diversity of reasons,’ she said.
‘Regardless of what a PhD student plans for after their graduation, their doctoral research contributes to the national research output.’
Yet she suggested a reason for why some PhD graduates choose to leave academia: money, or, more accurately, a lack thereof.
Read more: https://www.campusreview.com.au/2018/04/is-the-chief-scientist-out-of-touch-with-what-phds-want/
Australia’s first survey of PhD graduate outcomes
Kirstie Chlopicki, Campus Review
In an Australian-first, Group of Eight universities will investigate and publish the extent to which PhD students contribute to the nation.
[…]
The Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations (CAPA) has responded to the announcement with support.
“Doctoral students are a diverse group, with different expectations and reasons for undertaking the PhD. We are hopeful that the Go8 project will reflect this diversity and illuminate the long-term outcomes of completing doctoral study,” it said in a statement.
“We look forward to the existence of rich data on PhD career outcomes, which may be useful to prospective students, as well as to current students considering career paths to choose post-graduation.”
Read more: https://www.campusreview.com.au/2018/04/australias-first-survey-of-phd-graduate-outcomes/
HECS-HELP plan would hurt regional students even more
The Northern Daily Leader
Attacks on all fronts, according to University of New England Student Association (UNESA) president Koady Williams.
UNESA and other student unions across the nation have started petitions to “bury the bill”, Mr Williams saying it borders on “punishing people for seeking higher education.
[…]
On the loan cap, he says it could discourage people from seeking further education.
It’s a view supported by the Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations, which said earlier this year “the government should be prioritising an educated workforce for tomorrow”.
Read more: https://www.northerndailyleader.com.au/story/5330551/cap-threshold-more-pain-for-rural-students/
MEDIA RELEASE: CAPA welcomes PhD career pathways survey
The Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations (CAPA) is pleased to hear of the announcement of the ‘Understanding PhD Career Pathways’ project to be conducted by the Group of Eight (Go8) universities.
The Go8’s project intends to chart PhD career outcomes by surveying those who are three, five, and fifteen years out from PhD completion.
Doctoral students are a diverse group, with different expectations and reasons for undertaking the PhD. We are hopeful that the Go8 project will reflect this diversity and illuminate the long-term outcomes of completing doctoral study.
We look forward to the existence of rich data on PhD career outcomes, which may be useful to prospective students, as well as to current students considering career paths to choose post-graduation.
“Students who finish a PhD project have demonstrated high-level transferable skills in critical thinking, project management, communication, problem solving, and self-discipline,” says CAPA National President Natasha Abrahams. “We are very interested to see how the Australian PhD experience maps on to career outcomes.”
For further comment:
CAPA National President
Natasha Abrahams
E: president@capa.edu.au
P: 0430 076 993
UNE student association stands against new student loan policy
Meg Francis, Armidale Express
University of New England Student Association says the federal government’s new policy to lower the threshold for uni loan repayments ‘attacks’ students.
President Koady Williams said the association believed the proposed Higher Education Support Legislation Amendment (Student Loan Sustainability) Bill 2018 wasn’t an equitable solution.
[…]
He said UNESA was supporting the National Union of Students and Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations’ “bury the bill” campaign against the lower threshold.
“We are also encouraging students to sign the petition for the senate to drop the bill,” Mr Williams added.
“We need a government who supports education with their budget.”
The National Union of Students (NUS) and the Council of Postgraduate Students (CAPA) launched their campaign to fight proposed changes to student loan legislation earlier this year,” he said.
Read more: http://www.armidaleexpress.com.au/story/5326333/students-push-against-new-loan-policy/?cs=471
Why international students should fight for fair wage in Australia
Study International
Forty-three percent of international students earned less than AU$15 (US$12) an hour last year, and a quarter received less than half of the minimum wage, according to a survey called Wage Theft in Australia conducted by the National Temporary Migrant Work Survey.
Interestingly, the majority actually know they are being exploited. The study reveals that 73 percent of international students earning under the minimum wage are aware they are underpaid.
The question is: why do they do it?
“International students being illegally underpaid are unlikely to raise a fuss,” reasons Natasha Abrahams, president of the Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations, in an Op-Ed for The Australian.
Read more: https://www.studyinternational.com/news/international-students-fight-fair-wage-australia/