The step could be a game changer for enhancing educational, research, and economic collaboration between the countries, and mutually recognised qualifications will further open up pathways for mobility of students, professionals, and skilled workers between India and Australia.
โAustralia has a longstanding and strong relationship with India across education, skills and research,โ Australiaโs acting minister for Education and Youth, Stuart Robert said.
โThe task force will pave the way for new opportunities for graduates of both India and Australiaโ
โThe task force will pave the way for new opportunities for graduates of both India and Australia to use their qualifications.โ
Emphasising the importance of education as one of the key underpinnings of the growing relationship between the two countries, Robert said that education was โkey to the bilateral relationship.โ He also said that this step was testament to the fact that Indian students continued โto be a valuable part of our [the Australian] communityโ.
Robert said that this โcollaboration will serve both countries by expanding cooperation in education, and optimising mobility outcomes for Australian and Indian students and graduates, and [the countriesโ] education institutionsโ.
โImproved qualifications recognition arrangements will also underpin trade in professional services between Australia and India,โ he added.
The task force will consult with stakeholders and make best practices driven recommendations for the two-way qualifications recognition. The task force would primarily focus on the recognition of online and blended learning, joint degrees, and offshore campuses.
โThe announcement of the task force will be really key to achieving the aims and priorities of both India and Australiaโs education and research sectors,โ Angela Lehmann, head of Research at The Lygon Group told The PIE.
โTLG has been seeing intense interest in Australia in increasing engagement with Indiaโs higher education sector. The establishment of the task force is essential to achieving these goals.โย
Sharing her insight with The PIE, Lehmann added that she was โpleased to see [that] Australia is now embarking on a leader-level dialogue on these issues.โ
The UK and India commenced a similar dialogue in May 2021, aiming to have qualification recognition in place by the end of that year, she continued. โFor Australia itโs perhaps a case of better late than never,โย Lehmann added.
Elaborating on the significance of this long awaited step, Phil Honeywood, CEO of the International Education Association of Australia, told The PIE that theย announcement has โbeen many years comingโ.
โWe genuinely hope that it will lead to tangible outcomes in the near future,โ he said.
โMany Indian students have been frustrated that, even after obtaining a world class qualification from a top ranked Australian university, they cannot be accepted into the Indian Civil Service or other professional positions when they return home.
โEven when Australian education providers have attempted to establish overseas campuses in India they have found both the official and unofficial barriers to entry to be overwhelming. This is not a situation unique only to Australia, but has been cause for frustration amongst many of our competitor countries such as Canada and the UK,โ he stressed.
โIronically, Indian politicians are constantly telling us that they are in real need of overseas education providers to assist them in meeting the skill demands of their rapidly growing economy. So, let us hope that this latest announcement results in meaningful progress,โ he said.
Other key stakeholders and sector peak bodies have welcomed the announcement, as well. Speaking to The PIE, Anurag Kanwar, policy manager at Independent Higher Education Australia, said that her organisation โwelcomes the moves towards a special task force on qualifications recognition between Australia and Indiaโ.
Kanwar said that the โmutual qualification recognition is important for Australian and Indian migrantsโ and that the development has โthe potential to enhance mobility outcomes for Australian and Indian students and graduatesโ.
โIndia is one of Australiaโs key partners in international educationโ
โIndia is one of Australiaโs key partners in international education, with more than 90,000 Indian higher education students studying in Australia prior to the pandemic,โย Universities Australiaย chief executive, Catriona Jackson stated.
India was Australiaโs โsecond largest source of international students in 2022, accounting for more than 16% of [all] student visa holdersโ, she highlighted.
โThis is an important and positive step forward, and Universities Australia looks forward to progressย in achieving mutual qualification recognition,โ said Jackson, while emphasising that this would be โimportant for [both] Indian, as well as Australian studentsโ.
Jackson said that Universities Australia expected micro-credentials to be also โon the tableโ.
โThe bite-sized credentials are critical to upskill and reskill, and would be central to Indiaโs push for 29 million more skilled workers by 2030,โ she added.
โEnsuring โrecognitionโ of Australian degrees or micro-credentials is important for Indian studentsย going home, and Australian students working in India.
โAustralian universities look forward to continuing to work with both governments on this importantย project,โ Jackson concluded.
The taskforce is set to come up with a mechanism for recognition of education qualifications between India and Australia by the year end, with the implementation of the mechanism slated to begin in 2023.