This Bills Digest replaces an earlier preliminary Bills Digest dated 7 August 2023.
Key points
- The Higher Education Support Amendment (Response to the Australian Universities Accord Interim Report) Bill 2023 (the Bill) amends the Higher Education Support Act 2003 (HESA) to:
- extend eligibility to demand driven higher education courses to all Indigenous students, rather than only Indigenous students living in regional and remote areas
- remove the ‘50% pass rule’, which requires students to successfully complete at least 50% of their units of study to continue to access Commonwealth assistance for their course
- require higher education providers to have and comply with a policy to identify students at risk of not completing their units of study and to provide supports to assist.
- The Bill implements priority actions recommended in the Australian Universities Accord Interim Report.
- The Coalition has expressed concerns about the reversal of the 50% pass rule and called on the Government to hold universities to account for poor student outcomes.
- Independents, including Dr Helen Haines, Kate Chaney, Dr Sophie Scamps and Senator David Pocock, have welcomed the expansion of demand-driven funding for Indigenous students and the removal of the 50% pass rule.
- These amendments are initial steps as part of broader reforms. The Australian Universities Accord Expert Panel will be consulting further and building on the preliminary findings presented in the Interim Report before delivering its final report and recommendations in December 2023.
Introductory Info
Date introduced: 3 August 2023
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Education
Commencement: On Royal Assent.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Higher
Education Support Amendment (Response to the Australian Universities Accord
Interim Report) Bill 2023 (the Bill) is to amend the Higher Education
Support Act 2003 (HESA) to:
- uncap the number of Indigenous students who can enrol in a Commonwealth
supported place (CSP) by extending eligibility of demand-driven funding to
all Indigenous students, rather than only Indigenous students living in
regional and remote areas
- remove the ‘unnecessarily
harsh’ requirement—introduced as part of the Job-ready Graduates Package—that
after 8 units of a bachelor degree, students need to maintain a pass rate of at
least 50% to continue as a Commonwealth supported student and to be eligible
for FEE-HELP assistance
- motivate higher education providers to provide appropriate
support for students by requiring providers to have and comply with a ‘support
for students’ policy to assist in identifying students at risk of falling
behind and to support them to complete their study.
The Bill implements 2 priority actions recommended in the Australian
Universities Accord Interim Report that
require legislation.
Background—the
Australian Universities Accord
The Australian Government is developing an Australian
Universities Accord via a 12-month review of Australia’s higher education
system. While in opposition, Shadow Minister for Education, Tanya Plibersek, outlined
the ALP’s plan for establishing an Australian Universities Accord in August
2021:
The accord would be a partnership between universities and
staff, unions and business, students and parents, and, ideally, Labor and
Liberal – that lays out what we expect from our universities.
Following the election, Minister for Education, Jason
Clare, flagged
the Accord would be ‘an opportunity to build a long-term plan for our
universities’. It would have a wide scope:
Looking at everything from funding and access, to
affordability, transparency, regulation, employment conditions and also how
universities and TAFEs and other higher education and vocational education
providers and training institutions work together.
The review has been described
by the Government as ‘the first broad review of the higher education system
since the Bradley Review’ in 2008.
Minister Clare announced
the Accord’s Expert
Panel, to be chaired by Professor Mary O’Kane, and the Terms
of Reference in November 2022.
The Terms of Reference identify 7 priority areas for
review:
- Meeting Australia’s knowledge and skills needs, now and in the future
- Access and opportunity
- Investment and affordability
- Governance, accountability and community
- The connection between the vocational education and training and higher
education systems
- Quality and sustainability
- Delivering new knowledge, innovation and capability.
The Expert Panel’s Interim Report was released
in July 2023, with the final report due to Government in December 2023.
Consultation
for the Australian Universities Accord
The Accord’s Expert Panel was tasked with engaging across
all sectors and groups impacted by higher education policy. Consultation has
been undertaken at multiple stages of the Accord process and continues in response
to the Interim Report. A summary of consultation undertaken to date is set out
below.
Terms of
Reference
Stakeholders were invited to make initial submissions and complete
a survey in the context of the Terms of Reference between 24 November and 19
December 2022. The consultation received 185 submissions
and more
than 1,900 survey responses (p. 6). The Department of Education
commissioned Nous Group to undertake thematic analysis of the submissions.
Nous Group’s consultation
report identified common priorities from submissions, including:
- Improving access to the higher education system, particularly for
underrepresented cohorts and identifying programs to improve student outcomes
- Reviewing the current higher education funding model to ensure it
supports the long-term success of teaching, learning and research, in line with
national priorities
- Investigating the regulatory arrangements which govern the higher
education system
- Reviewing how the institutions within the higher education sector
interact with each other, the Vocational Education and Training (VET) sector
and industry to deliver the skills needs of the future (p. 5).
Discussion
paper
In February 2023, the Government released
the Australian
Universities Accord Discussion Paper and called for submissions by 11
April 2023. The Discussion Paper considered and posed questions around the role
of higher education in Australia’s future, and challenges and opportunities for
Australia and the higher education system. More than 300 written submissions
on the Discussion Paper were received and considered by the panel. Nous Group
was again engaged to thematically analyse the submissions and produce a consultation
report.
Submissions responded to key themes from the Discussion
Paper and included recommendations for reforms. Submissions also suggested
important enablers for the future of the higher education sector:
- coherence and integration between the VET and higher education
systems
- secure, affordable funding arrangements and incentives
- strong governance and accountability
- investment in capability and recognition of the higher education
workforce (p. 51).
Interim Report
On 19 July 2023, Minister Clare announced
the release of the Australian
Universities Accord Interim Report (Interim Report). The Interim
Report comprised 2 parts: priority actions to address immediate problems; and the
Expert Panel’s initial views and preliminary findings about larger scale issues
for further policy consideration to be discussed in the final report.
Stakeholders are invited
to submit written responses to the Interim Report to inform the Expert Panel’s
final report to the Minister. Submissions are open from 19 July 2023 to 1
September 2023.
Australian
Universities Accord Interim Report
The Interim Report identified 5 priority areas for
immediate action:
- Priority Action 1: Extend visible, local access to
tertiary education by creating further Regional University Centres (RUCs) and
establish a similar concept for suburban/metropolitan locations.
- Priority Action 2: Cease the 50% pass rule, given its poor
equity impacts, and require increased reporting on student progress.
- Priority Action 3: Ensure that all First Nations students
are eligible for a funded place at university, by extending demand driven
funding to metropolitan First Nations students.
- Priority Action 4: Provide funding certainty, through the
extension of the Higher Education Continuity Guarantee into 2024 and 2025, to
minimise the risk of unnecessary structural adjustment to the sector. Interim
funding arrangements must prioritise the delivery of supports for equity
students to accelerate reform towards a high equity, high participation system.[1]
- Priority Action 5: Through National Cabinet, immediately
engage with state and territory governments and universities to improve
university governance, particularly focusing on:
- universities
being good employers
- student
and staff safety
- membership
of governing bodies, including ensuring additional involvement of people with
expertise in the business of universities (pp. 6–7).
Government
response to the Interim Report
In releasing the Interim Report, Minister Clare outlined
actions to be implemented in response to the 5 priority areas. The Government
committed to:
- Establish up to 20 additional Regional University Study Hubs (formerly
Regional University Centres), building on the 34 existing Regional University
Study Hubs currently operating across the country, and establish up to 14
Suburban University Study Hubs.
- Abolish the 50 percent pass rule, introduced as part of the Job-ready
Graduates Scheme, which has had a disproportionately negative impact on
students from poor backgrounds and from the regions, and require increased
reporting on student progress.
- Extend demand driven funding to all First Nations students who are
eligible for the course they apply for. Currently this only applies to First
Nations students in regional and remote Australia.
- Extend the Higher Education Continuity Guarantee for a further two years
to provide funding certainty to universities as the Accord process rolls out,
and as part of this, require universities to invest any remaining funding from
their grant each year on additional academic and learning support for students
from poor backgrounds, from the regions and from other under-represented
groups.
- Work with state and territory governments to improve university
governance. This includes university governing bodies having more people with
expertise in the business of universities, and a focus on student and staff
safety and making sure universities are good employers.
The Bill implements
priority actions 2 and 3, which require legislation.
Since the introduction of the Bill, Minister Clare further
announced
in response to the Interim Report the appointment of Patty Kinnersly, chief
executive officer of Our Watch, to a
working group to advise on how universities can improve campus safety for students
and strengthen university governance.
Committee
consideration
Education
and Employment Legislation Committee
The provisions of the Bill have been referred to the Senate
Education and Employment Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 13
September 2023.[2]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
had no
comment on the Bill (p. 36).
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
The Coalition Government introduced
demand-driven funding for Indigenous students in regional and remote areas and
the 50% pass rule as part of the Job-ready Graduates Package
(JRG Package). In relation to the measures addressed in the Bill, the Coalition
has expressed
concerns about the reversal of the 50% pass rule and called
on the Government to hold universities to account for poor student outcomes. It
urged the Government to ensure that the expansion of the uncapped university
places for Indigenous students did not set students up to fail.
Independents, including Dr
Helen Haines, Kate
Chaney, Dr
Sophie Scamps and Senator David
Pocock, have welcomed the expansion of demand-driven funding for Indigenous
students and the removal of the 50% pass rule.
Position of
major interest groups
As outlined above, there has been significant consultation
at each stage of the review process to date and consultation is further invited
in response to the Interim Report.
Universities
Australia welcomed the introduction of the Bill and congratulated the
Government for quickly implementing priority actions from the Interim Report. Universities
Australia Chief Executive Catriona Jackson stated:
The 50 per cent pass rule under the Job-ready Graduates
package is hurting students from disadvantaged backgrounds. Its removal is long
overdue, so this is a very welcome step.
Universities have long called for uncapped places for all
Indigenous students regardless of their postcode, and we’re pleased the
legislation introduced today brings us closer to realising this outcome.
The Independent
Tertiary Education Council Australia (ITECA) welcomed the removal of the
50% pass rule but expressed concerns that the details of requirements for
providers in relation to student support measures, including penalty
provisions, were not yet clear. Details of the student support measures are to
be set out in the Higher
Education Provider Guidelines. ITECA expressed concern that there had not
been consultation on the legislation prior to its introduction and stated that
it would meet with the Government ‘to review the details of the Bill and to
consider the scope of penalties and the modalities of assessing contraventions’.
Since the introduction of the Bill, Minister Clare has released a consultation
paper on support for students policy requirements and changes to the Higher
Education Provider Guidelines (discussed further below).
Financial
implications
According to the Explanatory
Memorandum, the cost of expanding demand driven places is estimated at up
to $34.1 million over the period of 2023–24 to 2026–27 (p. 2).
Removing the 50% pass rate requirement and the new
requirement for providers to have and comply with a student support policy is
expected to cost $1.1 million over the same period (p. 2).
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed
the Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or
declared in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. The
Government considers that the Bill is compatible.[3]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
At the time of writing this Bills Digest, the Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights has not commented on the Bill.
Key issues
and provisions
Expanding
demand driven places
Demand driven places for Indigenous students living in
regional and remote areas were introduced from 2021 as part of the Coalition
Government’s JRG Package.[4]
The measure was aimed
at increasing participation and attainment rates by guaranteeing a CSP
for regional and remote Indigenous people in bachelor or bachelor honours
degrees at public universities (Table A providers which are listed in section
16-15 of the HESA).
Section 33-5 of HESA provides for total
basic grant amounts payable for Table A providers. In addition to amounts for
‘demand driven higher education courses’—paragraph 33-5(1)(c),Table A
providers receive a specific allocation for CSPs in ‘designated courses’
(currently only Medicine), and may enrol students in any combination of ‘higher
education courses’ (all non-designated and non-demand-driven courses) up to a
maximum basic grant amount.[5]
Currently, the definitions set out under Clause 1 of
Schedule 1 of HESA state:
demand driven higher education course means a
*course of study that:
(a) is undertaken by an *eligible Indigenous person
for the course of study with a *Table A provider; and
(b) is leading to a *higher education award that is a
bachelor degree or bachelor honours degree; and
(c) is not a *designated higher education course.
and
eligible
Indigenous person: an
Indigenous person is an eligible Indigenous person for a *course of study with a *Table A provider if, at the time the
person first enrols in a course of study with that provider, the person’s
permanent residential address is in a *regional area or a *remote
area.
This guarantees an Indigenous person living in a regional
or remote area who is admitted to university a funded place in a bachelor-level
program (other than in medicine).
Part 1 of Schedule 1 of the Bill expands access to demand
driven places to all Indigenous students by changing the definitions of demand
driven higher education course and eligible Indigenous person.
Item 1 of the Bill replaces paragraph (a) of the
definition of demand driven higher education course to remove eligible
Indigenous person, replacing it with an Indigenous person.
Items 2–4 then repeal the definition of eligible
Indigenous person, and the definitions for regional area
and remote area, as these are no longer needed.
Item 5 sets out the timing of the application of
the amendments, with the expansion of demand driven places to apply for the
2024 calendar year onwards.
Under the JRG Package, demand-driven funding for
Indigenous students living in regional and rural areas come into effect from
2021. The Department of Education estimated
that 160 more Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students would benefit from
the measure in 2021, rising to 1,700 students by 2024.
The Department of Education’s most recent Higher
Education Statistics (2021) includes information on students from equity
groups, including students who identify as Indigenous. Table 1 below shows
that the number and proportion of Indigenous commencing undergraduate students
has mainly been increasing over time.
|
Commencing Domestic Undergraduate Students |
All Domestic Undergraduate Students |
Equity group |
Indigenous |
All Commencing Domestic Undergraduate Students |
% |
Indigenous |
All Domestic Undergraduate Students |
% |
2006 |
2,499 |
178,559 |
1.4% |
6,604 |
534,719 |
1.2% |
2007 |
2,647 |
184,807 |
1.4% |
6,975 |
552,581 |
1.3% |
2008 |
2,786 |
187,372 |
1.5% |
7,038 |
561,886 |
1.3% |
2009 |
3,006 |
202,229 |
1.5% |
7,551 |
588,016 |
1.3% |
2010 |
3,337 |
218,379 |
1.5% |
8,243 |
619,625 |
1.3% |
2011 |
3,621 |
225,033 |
1.6% |
8,857 |
643,066 |
1.4% |
2012 |
3,866 |
246,569 |
1.6% |
9,441 |
679,595 |
1.4% |
2013 |
4,228 |
261,254 |
1.6% |
10,314 |
717,683 |
1.4% |
2014 |
4,514 |
270,362 |
1.7% |
11,286 |
745,733 |
1.5% |
2015 |
5,025 |
274,674 |
1.8% |
12,240 |
768,649 |
1.6% |
2016 |
5,466 |
279,704 |
2.0% |
13,320 |
784,524 |
1.7% |
2017 |
5,867 |
286,412 |
2.0% |
14,429 |
801,080 |
1.8% |
2018 |
5,801 |
281,238 |
2.1% |
14,871 |
804,614 |
1.8% |
2019 |
6,109 |
274,196 |
2.2% |
15,483 |
803,035 |
1.9% |
2020 |
6,511 |
287,383 |
2.3% |
16,559 |
818,364 |
2.0% |
2021 |
6,748 |
289,659 |
2.3% |
17,403 |
835,311 |
2.1% |
Source: Drawn from Department of Education, 2021 Section 11 Equity groups,
Table 11.2; Parliamentary Library calculations of percentages.
Notes: a Data excludes students where permanent home address is
overseas.
While stakeholders have generally supported the measure to
expand demand-driven funding to all Indigenous students, it is unclear how much
of an impact it will have on increasing the number of Indigenous students
enrolling at university. Professor Andrew Norton of the Australian National
University has questioned
whether capped funding for undergraduate degrees greatly constrains Indigenous
enrolments, arguing (links in original):
Improving but still
very high Indigenous attrition rates suggest that universities are, in their
admissions practices, already operating at the edge of what is legal and ethical, given that many Indigenous
students will end up with a HELP debt but not a degree. They do this to
maximise higher education opportunities for Indigenous people.
Professor Norton highlighted that a flaw in Indigenous
demand driven funding is that it only applies to bachelor degree enrolments,
whereas Indigenous students are more likely to use an enabling course or
diploma pathway course.
The Coalition has argued
for the need for greater accountability in the higher education sector to
ensure students complete degrees, citing poorer completion rates for
Indigenous students:
Improving our higher education sector is about much more than
providing more university places. It must also be about ensuring that these
students actually complete their degrees.
Only 41 per cent of undergraduate students complete their
degrees within the first four years. This number is far worse for Indigenous
students with a completion rate of only 26 per cent.
Removing
the 50% pass rule
Part 2 of Schedule 1 of the Bill amends HESA to
reverse the ‘50% pass rule’, a minimum completion rate that the Coalition Government
introduced under the JRG Package. The Higher Education
Support Amendment (Job-Ready Graduates and Supporting Regional and Remote
Students) Act 2020 introduced the 50% pass rule as a condition for
students accessing Commonwealth assistance. Students who fail to successfully
complete at least half of their units of study after they have attempted 8 or
more units towards a bachelor degree or higher, or 4 or more units for a course
lower than a bachelor degree, are no longer eligible to remain a Commonwealth
supported student (section 36-13) or eligible to receive FEE-HELP (section
104-1A).
HESA includes provisions to allow for exemptions to
the 50% pass rule for special circumstances that may impact on a student’s
ability to complete the requirements of a unit, for example, a student’s
medical condition changing or worsening, or the death or serious illness in the
student’s family—subsection 36-13(5) and section 104-30.
Item 10 of the Bill repeals section 36-13
and item 12 repeals section 104-1A. The Bill also includes consequential
amendments to remove references to repealed sections.
The rationale
for introducing the 50% pass rule was to prevent students from accruing large
HELP debts from studies they receive limited or no benefit from (p. 57).
There was considerable discussion about the rule when the
JRG Bill was introduced.[6]
The Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights discussed the potential for the 50% pass
rule to effectively make higher education unaffordable for a large number of
students as well as the potential for the measure to disproportionately impact
students who may face additional challenges undertaking higher education, such
as rural students moving away from home to study, Indigenous students, students
from low socio-economic backgrounds, students with disability, students who are
the first in their family to attend university, students with caring responsibilities,
and students from language backgrounds other than English (pp. 56–7). The
Committee sought additional advice from the then Minister of Education, Dan
Tehan, to assess the compatibility of the measure with the right to education
and the right to equality and non-discrimination (p. 59). The Committee further
considered the measure and Minister Tehan’s advice in its thirteenth
report (pp. 99–109).
The Interim
Report by the Accord’s Expert Panel identified removing the 50% pass rule
as a priority action. It stated:
Introduced as part of the JRG package, the 50% pass rule
disproportionately disadvantages students from equity backgrounds. Enhanced
reporting on student progress will increase the focus on improving the success
rates of at-risk students. While the Review believes other aspects of the JRG
package need reform, this change should proceed at the first possible
opportunity (p. 6).
The Interim
Report argued that the rule was causing ‘undue stress for many students’
and that it disproportionately affected underrepresented groups, ‘including
First Nations students, who are around twice as likely to be affected as other
students’ (p. 16).
As the 50% pass rule took effect from 1 January 2022,
there is limited publicly available data about the impact of the rule. The Interim
Report cited advice provided to the Expert Panel by Universities Australia,
with unpublished data that suggested more than 8,000 students had been or were
at risk of being affected by the rule (p. 62). Furthermore,
Students from underrepresented groups at university make up
the majority of those affected and First Nations students are around twice as
likely to be affected as their non-First Nations counterparts (p. 62).
In its submission
to the Universities Accord Discussion Paper, Universities Australia recommended
replacing the JRG Package with a new funding model. It singled out the 50% pass
rule as an ineffective measure to drive completion, stating: ‘This punitive
measure is widely regarded as being unnecessarily harsh’ (p. 12).
In the second reading debate for the Bill, Mr Tehan reiterated
the rationale of the rule was to hold universities to account for students
failing units, arguing it was put in place to stop universities ‘churning
students through units and courses they were failing:
We were saying clearly to universities, 'You will not be able
to continue to charge HECS to these students because they're failing.' What
they need to do is bring these students in and say, 'Is this course appropriate
for you?' Or, 'We are going to provide the services for you to make sure you do
pass.' That wasn't happening. What you're doing by taking this rule out is
you're going to make sure you see that happening again. This was about holding
universities to account. It wasn't about the students.
Alongside recommending the removal of the 50% pass rule,
the Interim
Report stated that:
Any changes to these arrangements need to be accompanied by
stronger accountability and reporting processes to better track students’
learning and engagement, as part of their progress at key milestones in their
units. This holds institutions to account for identifying at-need students as
early as possible to implement tailored strategies. This is also to ensure students
do not unnecessarily accrue debt without gaining a qualification (p. 62).
Part 2 of Schedule 1 of the Bill, ‘Supporting students to
succeed’, addresses such issues of accountability by requiring providers to
have a ‘support for students’ policy.
Support for
students policy
The Bill aims to ensure higher education providers have
adequate processes to identify and support students at risk of failing their
units. Item 6 inserts proposed section 19-43 which sets out
provisions requiring higher education providers to have and comply with a ‘support
for students’ policy.
The policy must provide information on:
- the provider’s processes for identifying students at risk of not
successfully completing their units of study—proposed subparagraph 19-43(2)(a)(i)
- the supports available from or on behalf of the provider to
assist students to successfully complete the unit of study they are enrolled in—proposed
subparagraph 19-43(2)(a)(ii).
The support for students policy must comply with any
requirements specified in the Higher Education Provider Guidelines—proposed
paragraph 19-43(2)(b). The Higher Education Provider Guidelines are
a legislative instrument made by the Minister under section 238-10. The
current guidelines are the Higher Education
Provider Guidelines 2023.
Providers are required to comply with and report on their compliance
with their support for students policy—proposed subsections 19-43(4)—(6).
Proposed subsection 19-43(7) imposes a civil penalty of 60 penalty units
($18,780) for providers contravening the requirements set out in proposed
section 19-43.[7]
Proposed section 19-43 will apply to higher
education providers approved under section 16-25 of HESA on and after
the commencement of item 18.
Consultation
is currently underway on the changes that will need to be made to the Higher
Education Guidelines in relation to the support for students policy. Minister
Clare released
a consultation
paper on 16 August 2023, with submissions sought until 15 September 2023.
There are numerous reasons that students
fail units, ranging from academic factors which universities can address,
such as teaching, academic literacy and study skills, to matters outside
universities’ control, such as those relating to health, work, family and
relationships, housing, and finances. In the consultation paper, the Department
of Education proposes information (not exhaustive) to be included in the support
for students policy, such as:
- how the higher education provider will assess academic and
non-academic suitability for continuing study
- processes that identify students at risk of not successfully
completing units of study
- processes to ensure students are connected to support
- arrangements to provide non-academic supports for students, such
as financial assistance, housing information and mental health supports
- how the higher education provider will provide access to targeted
individual literacy, numeracy and other academic supports as required
- a list of circumstances resulting in proactive offers of ‘special
consideration’ and academic adjustment arrangements for students affected by a
significant life event
- targeted in-course support from academic staff
- appropriate crisis and critical harm response arrangements for
students (pp. 8–9).
In submissions
to the inquiry into the Bill’s provisions
, universities have highlighted the support processes universities already
have in place, which they largely expect will meet new requirements. For
example, the University of Canberra stated
that its ‘range of support is targeted and proactive across academic and
non-academic aspects of a student’s university experience’ (p. 3). However,
universities have also expressed some concerns with the details of the new
support policy requirements to be included in the guidelines. For example, Innovative
Research Universities (IRU) stated:
there is a risk that the Guidelines could extend beyond what
is practical and implementable. This is particularly the case for non-academic
supports, such as financial assistance and crisis response (p. 2).
Concluding comments
The Accord Interim Report identified 5 priority actions to
address urgent concerns which could be implemented while larger-scale reforms
to the higher education system are considered by the Expert Panel. The Bill
proposes amendments to HESA to implement the 2 priority actions
requiring legislation.
As such, these amendments are initial steps as part of
broader reforms. The Expert Panel will be consulting further and building on
the preliminary findings presented in the Interim Report before delivering its
final report and recommendations in December 2023.
It is also important to note that the Universities Accord
process is taking place in the context of other reviews into different stages
of the education system currently underway:
Minister Clare noted
in his speech to the National Press Club when the Interim Report was released:
Each report will be individually important.
But it’s how they knit together that has the potential to
change the lives of people who aren’t even born yet.
Achieving reforms in the higher education sector as flagged
in the Interim Report, particularly those relating to increasing participation
for underrepresented
cohorts, will rely on reducing disparities
in outcomes across the education system more broadly.