Newsletter
Email:
Poll: This Week Question
Has Obama abandoned direct dealing with India?

Indian students could lose college berths in Australia

Font size: Decrease font Enlarge font

MELBOURNE: Unease is growing among thousands of Indian students that they could lose their college berths as Australian authorities crack down after an expose that most of these institutions are "very much sub-standard".

Students' group claimed that more than 1000 international students, mainly Indians, were already in a limbo as a number of colleges where they were enrolled in had closed down and the number could go up as high as 5000.

Conceding that some of the institutions that have sprung up to meet the booming demand were "very much sub-standard", Deputy Prime Minister and Education Minister Jullia Gillard sought to allay the unease, assuring the students that in case of the closure of their colleges they would be shifted to other establishments or their fees refunded.

"We have a comprehensive safety net for international students. If they are enrolled at a college that closes, then we have a guarantee that we will find them a comparable place at another provider, or if that is not possible, then their fees will be refunded," she said.

The government has intensified action on the educational institutions after the TV expose which has damaged USD 17 billion education industry -- which is Australia's third largest export earner. .
Gautam Gupta, a spokesman for the Federation of Indian Students in Australia confirming that some institutions where Indian students were enrolled were closing down, said: "these students are facing a tough time. Their families back home are facing financial pressure and some students even face deportation."

Ajay Unni, a member of FISA, said another 5,000 students could be displaced in next four to five days.

Elaborating on the government stand, Gillard said: "... Yes, there are some operators who have caused problems and we want to address that. But I don't accept... that somehow this is a broad brush across all of the international education industry. It's not. We have high quality providers, satisfied students."

"Now that doesn't mean that we turn a blind eye to bad practice and we've already acted to step up targeted audits to ensure that there is good quality and compliance with what we would say is the right thing to do for international students," she told ABC radio.

Gillard said the government had already taken two initiatives which included holding an International Student Round Table where international student representatives would come and talk to the government about what they would like to see and what would work for them on questions of complaints and quality and obviously questions of day to day living.

-PTI

Subscribe to comments feed Comments (0 posted):

Post your comment comment

Please enter the code you see in the image:

  • email Email to a friend
  • print Print version
  • Plain text Plain text

Rate this article
0