糖心Vlog

Secret report reveals snowballing international student numbers

Confidential data suggest published figures routinely underestimate foreign enrolments in Australian higher education

Published on
July 18, 2018
Last updated
July 18, 2018
A man fishing
Record catch: Australia鈥檚 elite are landing more overseas students

Published figures routinely underestimate international enrolments in Australian higher education, according to confidential data听that suggest that top-flight universities are monopolising the sector鈥檚 only significant source of revenue growth and driving domestic students towards minority status.

Department of Education and Training data obtained by 糖心Vlog show that research-intensive universities have massively increased their intake of foreign students since 2014, with one doubling its overseas enrolments. Four of them 鈥 the universities of Sydney, New South Wales, and Melbourne, plus Monash University 鈥 now collectively host more international students than Scandinavia.

The secret report suggests that听听and some university annual reports underestimate the听true number of overseas enrolments by several thousand. The department did not explain the discrepancy, saying only that the report was 鈥渄rawn from a different dataset鈥澨齠rom its published figures.

The secret report tracks the numbers of enrolled and commencing students recorded on the DET-administered听. It documents overseas student numbers in the first 11 months of 2017 compared with the equivalent periods of the preceding 15 years.

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It shows that after a dozen years of only modest foreign enrolment increases, Australia鈥檚 top universities dramatically escalated their overseas intake from 2014.

Leading the pack was the University of Sydney, which increased its overseas enrolments from about 15,530 in 2014 to 30,943 in 2017. It overtook the University of New South Wales听and the University of Melbourne to become Australia鈥檚 top higher education exporter after ramping up its foreign enrolments by almost 8,000 in 2016 alone.

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International enrolments over the three years rose by about 65听per cent to 23,176 at Monash, by 52听per cent to 24,415 at听Melbourne听and by 49听per cent to 24,785 at UNSW. Other big growers 鈥 albeit from a much smaller base 鈥 included the Australian National University, which increased international enrolments by 61听per cent to almost 9,000.

Charles Sturt and Southern Cross universities in New South Wales both more than doubled their foreign enrolments, to 9,100 and 3,500, respectively. But overseas student numbers rose only marginally at Melbourne鈥檚 La听Trobe and Victoria universities, and they fell significantly at the University of Canberra, Federation University in regional Victoria, Brisbane鈥檚 Griffith University and Perth鈥檚 Curtin and Murdoch universities.

The figures suggest that growth in Australian higher education exports is dominated by large universities from the prestigious Group of Eight network, while other institutions admit foreign students at a more modest rate, and a third group struggles to maintain numbers.

This could add to fears that snowballing education exports are pushing the higher education sector into a dangerous over-reliance on foreign tuition fees. Go8 universities, which attract the vast bulk of students from China, the听largest market, are considered particularly vulnerable.

Over the past three years, the Go8 share of public universities鈥 international enrolments has risen from about 41听per cent to 48听per cent in the state of New South Wales, from 43 per cent to 45听per cent in Victoria and from 63听per cent to 75 per cent in the Australian Capital Territory.

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The听Department of Education and Training would not commit to publicly releasing the report or producing similar statistics in the future. A spokesman said that the data had been produced for consultation with 鈥渒ey鈥 stakeholders. 鈥淚t was agreed that the information would not be publicly released,鈥 he said.

Considered alongside published enrolment听statistics in university annual reports, the confidential data suggest that international students constitute听about 35听per cent of enrolments at Monash, 41听per cent at UNSW and 52听per cent at Sydney.

Small graph Australian hotspots

A University of Sydney spokeswoman disputed this, saying that foreign students represented 37听per cent of last year鈥檚 recruits. She said that the secret report overstated the university鈥檚 international enrolments because of time lag issues in student visa data, and because it included students who had withdrawn or had enrolled at the university鈥檚 English-language college.

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She听added that the university鈥檚 annual report had overstated the overseas share of enrolments because of rounding and timing errors. The听听of the report was changed听after听THE鈥檚 enquiry.

Monash University acknowledged high concentrations of foreign students at Go8 institutions, particularly Chinese听taking听business, marketing, finance and accounting courses. Deputy vice-chancellor Sue Elliott said that Monash had been 鈥渨orking hard鈥 to diversify not only the source countries of its international cohort听but also the courses听those students entered.

Melbourne said that the growth in foreign students, particularly at postgraduate level, was consistent with its curriculum design and student load planning.

The Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency declined to say whether it was planning to issue universities with guidance on maximum proportions of overseas students. It said that Australia鈥檚 糖心Vlog Standards Framework did not prescribe such limits.

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john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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