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Australian segmentation study unpacks uniphobia

Some resisters mistrust tertiary education but others just do not see the need

Published on
October 27, 2024
Last updated
October 27, 2024
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University sceptics have distinct reasons for avoiding tertiary education, and distinct strategies are needed to lure them into the fold, research suggests.

A 鈥渟egmentation鈥 study by the University of Newcastle has found that many young locals do not have tertiary education 鈥渙n their radar鈥, for both structural and cultural reasons.

Some people are 鈥渙ptimistically curious鈥 and see value in degrees but are working 鈥 often to support young families 鈥 and will not incur student debt without guarantees of better employment. Others are 鈥渃onfident by-passers鈥, also seeing value in university but comfortable that they can get ahead without it.

A third group are 鈥渃omplacent rejectors鈥, convinced that their supposedly meagre academic abilities will stifle any advantage from tertiary education. A fourth group of 鈥渨orried sceptics鈥 dislike education and consider university 鈥渟tressful and not worth the money鈥.

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Newcastle undertook the research as part of a project to boost higher education attainment rates in the region, in response to a clarion call from the Australian Universities Accord panel.

The accord鈥檚 final report聽recommended聽a target of 55 per cent of 25- to 34-year-old Australians possessing degrees in 2050 鈥 up from about 45 per cent now 鈥 as part of a broader goal of at least 80 per cent of working-age people having tertiary qualifications.

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These targets are particularly challenging in the university鈥檚 catchment area, which includes the coal-rich Hunter Valley. Excluding Newcastle, the region鈥檚 main city, the Hunter has the lowest university attainment rate in New South Wales. Rates in nearby coastal areas are also well below the state average, according to data compiled from Australian Bureau of Statistics figures.

Disinterest from teenagers聽is exacerbating the challenge. School leaver enrolments at Australian universities over the past three years were below the researchers鈥 鈥渓owest case projection鈥 and up to 11 per cent lower than the most optimistic expectations.

Newcastle deputy vice-chancellor Kent Anderson commissioned the research after applications from school leavers suddenly fell well below the university鈥檚 predictions in late 2022. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just missing this whole group of students,鈥 he said.

The change was reminiscent of a Covid-era spike in the proportion of young people neither working nor studying. Research suggests that the 鈥溾 from even a year鈥檚 total disengagement from employment and education contributes to lifelong disadvantage.

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鈥淚t goes to health, it goes to economic impact [and] a whole bunch of other things,鈥 Professor Anderson said. 鈥淲e as a community need to worry about it, because鈥t only takes 12 months until you hardwire in some of these life outcomes.鈥

But unlike counterparts who were 鈥渙n the fence鈥 about university 鈥 receptive to education but hindered by practical issues such as time availability or access to campus 鈥 many of these people had 鈥渃ompletely checked out鈥 from work and study. Securing their commitment to two or three years of tertiary education was a daunting task, he said.

The university鈥檚 head of brand and reputation, Tina Imig, said the analysis had involved almost 500 locals aged between 16 and 30 with no plans for post-school education. The study had borrowed from聽聽commissioned by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and had 鈥渓anded on four very similar segments鈥 to the US study, albeit with different proportions of each.

Males dominated all four segments in the Newcastle study, comprising almost three-quarters of the 鈥渃onfident by-passers鈥 group. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e really self-assured,鈥 Ms Imig said.

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john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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