Speakers urged for aย reset to Australiaโ€™s international education offering.

โ€œ[Australia] isย a great country, with lots of opportunities and great teachers who care,โ€ saidย Claire Field, principal of Claire Field and Associates, in her keynote speech.

โ€œItโ€™s also where we help you prepare for global careers, with innovative teaching and work integrated learning. When you study with an Australian provider, weโ€™ll make sure you can learn and earn, and do work in the industry you want a career in.

โ€œOur institutions have extensive and growing overseas operations and relationships with employers in other countries across the region. Our courses are designed to help you flourish in your future career, wherever you choose to work.โ€

Simon Moore, assistant secretary of Partnerships at the Australian governmentโ€™sย Department of Education, Skills and Employment, elaborated on the recently released 10-yearย international education strategy.

The strategy reaffirms โ€œAustraliaโ€™s commitment to providing high quality student experiences and Australiaโ€™s willingness to work with international partners for education and researchโ€, he said.

โ€œDifferent cultures and perspectives in classrooms and campusesย build the intercultural understanding of Australian students and prepares them to enter a globalised workforce,โ€ he added.

Opening the conference,ย ISANAย presidentย Bronwyn Gilson called on peak bodies to communicate and support each other.

โ€œBased on what we have been through, how do we take the best from the past, and build a resilient, best practice [driven], student and staff centric industry? And, how do we do this sustainablyโ€ฆ can we have a carbon neutral footprint?โ€

She highlighted the need for having a โ€œcoordinated approach and one voiceโ€ towards building awareness about the immense value that international education and international students bring, to the Australian economy, community and society at large.

CEO ofย International Education Association of Australiaย Phil Honeywood highlighted the close work between his organisation and ISANA, with theย collaboration recently formalised via aย memorandum of understanding.

โ€œIt is going to have a lot of good spin offs in terms of the cooperative efforts between our two associations. We are both long standing associations and we areย really passionate about supporting student welfare and student service delivery,โ€ he said.

โ€œWe needed to tune into [the perspectives of] onshore and offshore studentsโ€

CEO ofย diversity & inclusion expertsย MindTribes,ย Div Pillay, emphasised thatย communications fromย universities and government agencies have needed toย have a โ€œhumanistic touch and a cross cultural lensโ€.

โ€œWe needed to tune into [the perspectives of] onshore and offshore students whose home country wasnโ€™t Australia,โ€ she emphasised.

Honeywood alsoย reiterated the need to have โ€œculturally appropriateโ€ mental health counselling facilities and arrangements for international students.

Manager for International Education (Global Engagement) atย Austrade Helen Kronberger, while giving a detailed account of the mechanisms that were put in place to support international students and the initiatives of Austrade in communicating those to students, conceded that, โ€œwe have a lot of work to do as a country to reassure [international] students and their parentsโ€.

โ€œThere is always more that can be done, but I think we have seen a genuine effort to care across the board and I genuinely hope that the planned easing of restrictions will enable students to confidently travel to see their family and return to Australia to continue their studies,โ€ she said.

The series ofย International Student Sentiment Surveys, run by Study Australiaย and collected more than 16,000 responses over the past two years, show โ€œongoing commitment by a strong majority to stay and complete studiesโ€ in Australia, she said. However, the percentage of that group indicating theyโ€™d complete their studies in Australia had fallen from 79% to 67% between the second survey and the fourth, carried out in September, she said.

While speaking about supporting international students, Chris Beard, executive director ofย ISANA NZ, mentioned that, โ€œthe best policy is a grounded policyโ€.

โ€œItโ€™s important for those who work closest with the international students, to be also involved in the decision making at the broader policy level, he said,ย emphasising that with the disruptions caused by the pandemicโ€™s โ€œchoppy watersโ€, there came โ€œopportunities to look up and see fresh horizonsโ€.

โ€œThe question for all of us is what would we changeโ€ once the pandemic eased and things got back to normal, he said.

โ€œThe question for all of us is what would we changeโ€

โ€œSo, what was a little bit dysfunctional before that needs to be worked on and what do we not want to return to?โ€ he urged all to deliberate.

Beard further mentioned that the sector in New Zealand was โ€œexploring not only the sense of [having a] recovery, but also resetโ€. The sector should look to transform the dialogue from international students being seen as โ€œcash cowsโ€ to actually making them โ€œthe heart of the enterpriseโ€, he noted.

ISANA NZ was โ€œpressing hard for the formation of a specialist international education profession, with its own pathways and its own sector specific credentials, so that international education specialists could be employed in policy, in regulatory bodies, in schools, [etc.] as specialistsโ€, he continued.

The 2021ย ISANA Conference witnessed over 40 sessions featuring more than 60 presenters and presentations, centring on theย sub themes of: Compliance, Policy & ESOS, Employability, Future of international education, Impact of international education experience, and Innovation.

The 2022 conference isย set to be held in Christchurch, New Zealand.

Source