Chapter1 Education services for overseas students bills
Referral and conduct of the inquiry
1.1
The following bills were referred by the House of Representatives
Selection Committee on 22 September 2011 and are addressed in this chapter:
n Education Services
for Overseas Students Legislation Amendment (Tuition Protection Service and
Other Measures) Bill 2011;
n Education Services
for Overseas Students (TPS Levies) Bill 2011; and
n Education Services
for Overseas Students (Registration Charges) Amendment Bill 2011.
1.2
The suite of education services for overseas students (ESOS) amendment
bills are part of the Government’s response to the findings of the review of
ESOS services undertaken by the Hon Bruce Baird AM, titled Stronger,
simpler, smarter ESOS: supporting international students (the Baird
Review), and released in March 2010.
1.3
The Baird Review was undertaken as a result of significant growth in the
number of overseas students and following a series of incidents involving
international students that included closures of education institutions
resulting in a loss of fees and education and a series of violent attacks on
Indian students. These incidents tarnished the reputation of the international
education sector in Australia.[1]
1.4
The Baird Review recommended a risk assessment and management approach
to regulation, monitoring and registration of those providing education
services to international students and a system of tuition protection for
international students.
1.5
The first phase of the Government’s response to the Baird Review was
implemented through the Education Services for Overseas Students Legislation
Amendment Act 2010, which passed
Parliament in April 2011. The Bill for that Act was the subject of an inquiry
by the Senate Standing Committee on Education, Employment and Workplace
Relations.[2]
1.6
The bills under current consideration implement the second and final
phase of the Government response to the Baird Review.[3]
1.7
The inquiry was advertised by media release and in The Australian
as well as directly inviting submissions from stakeholders.
1.8
The Committee received 22 submissions and held 1 public hearing. Details
of submissions and the public hearing are listed at Appendix A and Appendix B
respectively.
Outline of the bills
Education Services for Overseas Students Legislation Amendment (Tuition
Protection Service and Other Measures) Bill 2011
1.9
The ESOS Amendment (Tuition
Protection Service and Other Measures) Bill provides protection of the tuition
paid for overseas students in the event an education provider fails to provide
services. It does this through:
n setting provider
default obligations;
n establishing a single
tuition protection service (TPS), replacing the current tuition assurance and
ESOS assurance schemes;
n providing for students
to be more active in placement options following provider failure;
n requiring the TPS to
be fully sector-funded without need for Government financial assistance; and
n establishing a new
TPS governance structure led by a statutory TPS director.
1.10
The Bill also:
n establishes a
national registration scheme for education providers;
n limits the collection
of fees to one study period in advance and requires that these fees be separately
banked and not drawn upon until the commencement of the provision of tuition;
and
n strengthens record
keeping requirements so that students of defaulting registered providers are
able to have these records transferred to a new provider.
1.11
The Bill also deals with a number of consequential amendments.
Education Services for Overseas Students (TPS Levies) Bill 2011
1.12
The ESOS (TPS Levies) Bill provides a requirement for ESOS providers to
pay fees and levies to fund the tuition protection scheme established under the
ESOS (TPS and Other Measures) Bill.
1.13
The Bill defines who is required, and at what rate, to pay the following:
n registration fee of
$100 plus $2 per enrolment;
n base fee of $200 plus
$5 per enrolment;
n risk rated premium
based on provider risk of default; and
n special tuition
protection levy to be paid only when the sector is buoyant to protect against
future sector shock.
1.14
The Bill allows for indexation of the registration and base fees. The
Bill also allows the TPS Director to set components of the risk rated premium
and special tuition protection levy by legislative instrument.
Education Services for Overseas Students (Registration Charges) Amendment Bill
2011
1.15
The cost of administering the ESOS Act and the Commonwealth Register of
Institutions and Courses for Overseas Students is funded by a compulsory
registration fee payable by all registered providers who intend on providing
services to international students. The ESOS (Registration Charges) Amendment
Bill will amend the way that fees are set by adopting a risk management
approach to the fee structure.
1.16
The Bill provides the following registration fee structure:
n all registered providers
will continue to pay a compulsory annual registration fee based on a flat fee
plus a charge for total enrolments and courses provided;
n if compliance action
has been taken against a provider in the previous year, an additional fee is
payable;
n for a course of less
than 13 weeks duration, each student is considered 0.25 of an enrolment and for
a course between 13 and 26 weeks duration, each student is 0.5 of an enrolment;
and
n new providers will be
required to pay a scaled ‘entry to market’ fee reducing over the course of
three years, in recognition of the higher compliance and supervision costs
associated with new providers.
Submitter concerns
1.17
Of the 22 submissions received, 20 were from industry stakeholders. Several
points of concern emerged across submissions from industry peak bodies and
service providers relating to specific proposals in the Bills. The Committee
pursued these matters at a public hearing with representatives of the
Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations DEEWR). Stakeholder
concerns focused on:
n the proposed timeline
to commencement of measures;
n the definition of and
requirements associated with provider defaults, particularly:
-> the definition
of location at which a course is provided, particularly as this relates to
multi-campus providers; and
-> notification
timeframes required for provider defaults;
n the definition of and
requirements associated with student defaults, particularly;
-> with
regard to student commencement dates; and
-> notification
timeframes required for student defaults;
n the requirement to
set maximum periods of study;
n the requirement that
no more than 50 per cent of pre-paid fees be collected and that these fees be collected
no more than two weeks prior to the course commencement; and
n record keeping
requirements.
Implementation timeframe
1.18
Clause 2 of the ESOS Amendment (Tuition Protection Service and Other
Measures) Bill sets out the commencement of the proposed measures, with
exceptions and conditions, as the first 1 July after the Act receives Royal
Assent.
1.19
Stakeholders expressed varying degrees of support for and concern at an
implementation timeframe for the proposed measures commencing on 1 July
2012.
1.20
TAFE Directors Australia expressed urgent and wholehearted support for
implementation in 2012.[4]
1.21
English Australia acknowledged:
The potential damage to Australia’s reputation if the TPS is
not ready to operate effectively from 1 July 2012 will be severe … [However]
the sector would need to have confidence that the timeline is appropriate for
the Commonwealth to be able to establish the new TPS Director and Board and run
the tender to find the service provider to manage the new placement scheme and
Fund…[5]
1.22
Other stakeholders expressed concern at ‘tight’ implementation
timeframes,[6] or that 2012 was ‘too
soon’.[7] For instance, the Melbourne
College of Divinity found it:
difficult to visualise that the Appointments of TPS Director
and TPS Advisory Board, and other necessary elements of the governance
structure would be in place and organised sufficiently to commence on 1 July
2012.[8]
1.23
In response DEEWR noted:
the concerns from the sector regarding the implementation
time frames, but … the Baird recommendations were publicly released in March
2010, around 18 months ago. The department believes delay continues the risks
associated with the current arrangements, including impacts on students,
reputational damage and the exposure of Australian taxpayers associated with
future college closures. These concerns are well set out in Mr Baird's review
report.[9]
1.24
Furthermore:
the major impact for providers in relation to the
commencement of the TPS will be in relation to the proposed TPS levy. This levy
will not commence until 2013. It is anticipated that the TPS director would
likely make a decision on the TPS levy in October 2012—next year—and
subsequently a legislative instrument would be brought before the parliament
shortly thereafter. These time frames are not dissimilar from those that
currently apply in relation to the decision making process.[10]
1.25
DEEWR reiterated the importance of the proposed reforms:
all of the issues which Mr Baird raised about the fragility
of the current arrangements apply. The system at the moment is really quite
fragile in my view, having watched it for quite a long time. It was a system
designed for a very small international sector and now we have a very big one,
so it was fit for purpose when it was introduced and modified. The longer we go
before we put it on a firm footing the more we run the risk which Mr Baird has
identified—and that is the existing system will fall over.[11]
1.26
The Committee notes the availability of the Baird Review since early in
2010 and the additional time prior to the commencement of the TPS levy in 2013 has
provided the industry with adequate timeframes to meet the new proposed
requirements. The proposed timeframe for implementation of the Bill as set out
at Clause 2 is thus supported.
Provider defaults
1.27
Schedule 1, Part 1, Division 2, Subdivision A, Clause 46A of the ESOS
Amendment (Tuition Protection Service and Other Measures) Bill proposes that
registered providers are considered to have defaulted if the provider fails to provide
the course to the student at an agreed location or the course ceases to be
provided at the agreed location after commencement but before it is completed
and the student does not withdraw.
1.28
DEEWR further explained ‘we have had concerns from students that thought
they were enrolling in Sydney and have been told that they have to go to the
Central Coast or something like that.’[12]
1.29
The peak body representing Australian government schools providing education
services for international students, the Australian Government Schools
International (AGSI), argued that location should be understood to allow
flexibility to providers with multiple campuses when these campuses are within
reasonable proximity to one another.[13] This point was supported
by the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) Government, Government, Education and
Training International Tasmania and the New South Wales (NSW) Department of
Education and Communities.[14]
1.30
In response to these concerns DEEWR stated:
if the provider has several possibilities or options for
where they might provide the course, they can identify that at the time when
they are registering the location … the policy of this is obviously to avoid
situations where the provider suddenly moves the course from somewhere that is
well equipped to another location that is completely different … there will be
circumstances where the provider wants to have a bit more flexibility, but I
think that can be handled up front by the provider notifying us of those locations
at the time.[15]
1.31
Furthermore:
the provider can also discharge their default obligations by
offering the student an alternative place in another location as long as that
is accepted by the student in writing … they discharge their default
obligations not by refund but by offering the student an alternative place…[16]
1.32
Students should be entitled to know the possible locations at which a
course could be offered as location can affect the resources that may be made
available to the student as well as considerations such as ease of access. The
Committee agrees with the Department that requiring providers to fully inform
students of the possible locations at which a course is offered is a reasonable
requirement on providers and protects the interests of students. Requirements
set out at Clause 46A are thus supported.
Student defaults
1.33
Schedule 1, Part 1, Division 2, Subdivision B, Clause 47A of the ESOS
Amendment (Tuition Protection Service and Other Measures) Bill proposes that an
overseas student defaults if the student does not commence on the day of the
commencement of the course.
1.34
AGSI suggested that increased flexibility for student commencement dates
would allow for:
Students [who] may not start their school course on the
agreed starting day for many reasons including delays in visa processing,
flights being overbooked during peak times, significant cultural events in
their home country or other personal reasons. In such situations it should not
be considered a student default.[17]
1.35
AGSI’s concerns were echoed by other stakeholders.[18]
1.36
DEEWR referred to:
a definition of agreed starting date in the consequential
amendments to the bill which says it is: “the day on which the course was
scheduled to start, or a later day agreed between the registered provider for
the course and the student”. In the case where a visa was not processed, if the
student and provider agreed a later starting date, the agreed starting date
would be adjusted accordingly. So I think that eventuality is covered by the
bill.
1.37
In a case where a student was unable to amend an agreed start date
because of a circumstance arising at short notice:
I think that if on the day or the next day the student
contacted the provider there is certainly scope to interpret that agreed
starting date as being amended. Obviously, once you have passed 48 or 72 hours
it is then an issue of whether or not the provider and the student then agreed.
I think a commonsense approach would apply … The student would then actually be
at the course and there is no point in requiring the provider to continue with
the default provision. No-one is going to enforce that…
There would be no obligation on the provider to continue
with the default process. It would be absurd to continue to do that.[19]
1.38
While the concerns of providers in relation to students defaulting as a
result of not attending at the date of course commencement are understandable,
the Committee accepts the Department’s reassurance that a common-sense and
practical interpretation of Clause 47A should and will prevail and thus supports
the Clause.
Reporting default requirements
1.39
Schedule 1, Part 1, Division 2, Subdivision A, Clause 46B of the ESOS
Amendment (Tuition Protection Service and Other Measures) Bill requires that a
provider must notify in writing the Secretary and TPS Director within 24 hours in
the event that they default. The 24 hour timeframe required for notification
provoked many stakeholders to complain of impracticalities of the reporting
requirement.[20]
1.40
A 24 hour timeframe for notification of student default set at Subdivision
B, Clause 47C of the Bill was also a subject of criticism from stakeholders.[21]
1.41
Stakeholders were typically concerned that:
communication of such situations goes through a number of
channels. Administrative offices and schools are usually closed on weekends and
most schools providers would not be able to comply with a 24 hour reporting
requirement.[22]
1.42
DEEWR responded that:
To the extent possible these notifications will be simplified
and automated through the PRISMS [Provider
Registration and International Students Management System] computer
system. In the case of provider default, this will enable the support
mechanisms for students to be activated as quickly as possible … the 24-hour …
time frame has been developed to reduce delays should the student be referred
to the TPS, especially in situations where student welfare concerns are
paramount.[23]
1.43
In relation to providers; ‘making it a 24-hour reporting requirement
does put it right at the forefront of people's minds … 24 hours is really
saying you need to tell us immediately’[24]
1.44
The Committee accepts that considerations of student welfare and the
reputation of Australian providers of education services to overseas students
are well served by requiring prompt notifications of defaults to the regulator.
However, the proposed 24 hour requirement would appear unnecessarily burdensome
to providers.
Recommendation 1 |
|
The Committee recommends that Schedule 1, Part 1, Division
2, Subdivision A, Clause 46B of the Education Services for Overseas Students
Legislation Amendment (Tuition Protect Service and Other Measures) Bill 2011
be amended to require providers to notify the regulator within 72 hours of a
provider default. |
Recommendation 2 |
|
The Committee recommends that Schedule 1, Part 1, Division
2, Subdivision B, Clause 47C of the Education Services for Overseas Students
Legislation Amendment (Tuition Protect Service and Other Measures) Bill 2011
be amended to require providers to notify the regulator within 72 hours of a
student default. |
Tuition Protection Service Advisory Board
1.45
Schedule 1, Division 4, Subdivision A of the ESOS Amendment (Tuition
Protection Service and Other Measures) Bill provides for the establishment of a
TPS Advisory Board to provide advice and make recommendations to the TPS
Director in relation to the making of a legislative instrument each year to
discharge the Director’s obligations under Clause 9, Subclause 3 and Clause 10,
Subclause 2 of the ESOS (TPS Levies) Act 2011.
1.46
The determinations relate to risk rated premium and special tuition
protection components of the TPS levy.
1.47
Clause 55C provides for membership of the Advisory Board from five designated
agencies and Subclause 1, Paragraph b provides for ‘up to 7 other members.’
1.48
English Australia called for this proposal to specify ‘provision for the
seven non-government members of the Board to include representation from across
the different sectors of international education.’[25]
1.49
TAFE Directors Australia sought assurances that a TAFE representative be
specifically included on the Advisory Board.[26]
1.50
DEEWR outlined the intention of membership composition of the Advisory
Board:
The legislation does impose an obligation on the minister to
be satisfied that the board member has the qualifications and experience that
the minister considers relevant to the performance of the board…
if the minister is considering ‘relevant to the performance
of the board’ function, then in appointing the members the minister would have
a view to full composition of the board and how they fulfil the functions. I do
not think it is a person by person assessment. I think it is assessment of
those seven members and how they would address the composition of the board and
fulfil the functions.[27]
1.51
The Committee supports the provision of industry membership to the TPS
Advisory Board and urges the Government to ensure a broad representation
reflecting high and low risk providers as well as the various sectors of the
industry on the Board.
Recommendation 3 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
ensures broad representation of industry stakeholders on the TPS Advisory Board
reflecting high and low risk providers as well as the various sectors of the
industry. |
Study periods
1.52
Schedule 3, Part 1, Division 1, Clause 22 of the ESOS Amendment (Tuition
Protection Service and Other Measures) Bill proposes that a written agreement
between provider and student set the length of each study period and requires that
the length of a study period not exceed 24 weeks.[28]
1.53
Many industry stakeholders observed that the proposed maximum length of
a study period was not appropriate and would be particularly difficult to accommodate
for primary and secondary school providers.[29]
1.54
Universities Australia also expressed concern that the 24 week maximum
imposed on a study period would remove flexibility from the provision of
university courses.[30]
1.55
DEEWR explained:
the limit on study periods up to 24 weeks was chosen because
it is an average semester: approximately six months. Anything longer than this
would significantly dilute the effectiveness of the proposed measure. I note
that the closure of a large, multijurisdictional ELICOS—English
language—provider due to the business decision of a foreign owner in 2010
affected over 2,000 students, most of whom had paid full upfront fees amounting
to a total refund liability of $11 million. If these controls had been in
place, this would have significantly reduced the potential refund liability on
that occasion. Following consultation with the peak body, English Australia,
the proposed study period was increased from 20 weeks to 24 weeks to better
accommodate short courses. As drafted, it allows the provider to collect
prepaid fees for more than one short course in a study period as long as
together they still fall within a 24-week period.[31]
1.56
DEEWR noted that some government schools had raised concerns that they
had very limited numbers of international students and would find the proposed
regime burdensome. DEEWR noted:
schools are around about 40 per cent of the total number of
registrations. There are a lot of them and a lot of them have a small number of
international students. Some have none this year and one the next, so they have
them in little pockets. The team spends a disproportionate amount of time
providing advice and support to those schools because they are not used to the
rules. I do not think it really argues in favour of relaxing the rules, because
they still need to treat the international students properly even if they do
not have very many.[32]
1.57
The Committee endorses the cultural and social benefits of primary and
secondary schools providing education services to overseas students. The
presence of overseas students can enhance the education experiences of entire
student bodies.
1.58
School terms or semesters run under a 24 week period. Understanding a
school year as consisting of two study periods may slightly increase
administrative burdens on providers and may also slightly increase
inconvenience for those who pay for the education services. The measure would
require two payments and invoicing instead of a single payment to cover an
academic year.
1.59
While Government schools do not collect fees from domestic students, the
requirement to pay school fees for each school terms imposed on the vast
majority of Australian students attending private schools does not appear to
have deterred parents choosing this option.
1.60
The Committee supports the considerable increase in security provided to
overseas students provided by a 24 week maximum study period as offsetting the
relatively minor inconvenience to providers of education services and the
overseas purchasers of these services and thus supports Clause 22.
Pre-paid fees
1.61
Schedule 3, Part 1, Division 2, Clause 27 of the ESOS Amendment (Tuition
Protection Service and Other Measures) Bill proposes that a provider will not
be able to collect more than 50 per cent of a student’s tuition fee before
course commencement unless the course has only one study period not exceeding
24 weeks.[33]
1.62
Industry stakeholders expressed concern that the requirement that a
provider not collect in excess of 50 percent of a student’s tuition fee before
course commencement proposed in Clause 27 would inconvenience customers.[34]
For example, AGSI stated:
The practice across all school providers is to collect the
total tuition fees upfront to save parents making further money transfers
during the program.[35]
1.63
The Council of Private Higher Education raised a particular
circumstance:
when fees for a full year are pre-paid … under any form of
scholarship or sponsorship on behalf of the student. The number of students
affected may not be large but the implications are serious.[36]
1.64
Universities Australia identified the provision of English Language
Intensive Courses for Overseas Students as the only area which may be affected
by the limitation on collection of tuition fees and argued that:
universities have not failed to provide refunds to students
or needed to call on external sources of funds to do so. Hence the
justification of applying this restriction to universities is not clear.[37]
1.65
Some submitters also raised concerns that the limitation on prepaid fees
to two weeks prior to course commencements would prove problematic in their
capacity for future planning and capacity to secure teaching staff:
Planning and staffing will be compromised severely as
providers will not have certainty over student levels until 2 weeks before
classes commence. This is an unreasonable situation to place organisations in
who have long time lines to manage in securing staff, planning timetables,
facilities etc. The overwhelming performance of educational institutions in the
past does not support this major constraint on operations.[38]
1.66
The current system has no restrictions on the acceptance of pre-paid
fees, as DEEWR noted:
Currently, providers are able to collect full or part course
fees from students on enrolment before their visa is approved. This can
involved considerable sums of money and may have to be refunded if the provider
is unable to deliver the course or the student is not approved for a student
visa. This can undermine quality as once all fees are paid the incentive for
providers to continue to ensure students are satisfied with the service is
obviously reduced. It also encourages poor business practices, with some
providers starting up with little capital to fall back on should there be a
downturn in enrolments or an increase in visa refusals.[39]
1.67
The proposed system would allow for:
n the collection of up
to 100 percent of fees on enrolment where the course is 24 weeks or shorter;
n the collection of up
to 50 percent of fees on enrolment when the course is longer than 24 weeks with
remaining fees not being able to be collected until two weeks prior to the
course being delivered.
1.68
As DEEWR explained:
This means, for example, that a student enrolled in a
three-year degree course with six semesters costing $50,000 may be asked to pay
$25,000 for the first semester on enrolment with $25,000 distributed over the
remaining semesters.[40]
1.69
In practical terms, enrolment occurs many months prior to the course
commencing, as students need to apply for visas and financial commitment to the
course is part of visa requirements. Providers should therefore have ample
opportunity to plan for incoming enrolments. As the two week limitation on fee
payment only applies to ongoing students, the Committee believes the risk to
forward planning is minimal.
1.70
The Committee also notes that staggered payment for provision of service
is a good business practice and it is reasonable for consumers to pay as they
are satisfied with the quality of services providers. The proposed pre-paid fee
system will not only reduce the liability of the TPS in the case of provider
default, but serve as an incentive for the provision of high-quality education
services, improving the reputation of the sector as a whole.
1.71
The Committee was reassured that restrictions on the amount of fees a
provider is able to require from a student prior to their commencement of a
course will not operate as any additional incentive for students to ‘shop
around’ for alternative providers thus increasing the difficulty of forward
planning.
1.72
The Committee notes concerns that some parents and scholarship providers
pay fees to take advantage of exchange rates or administrative arrangements and
may feel disadvantaged when having to make multiple fee payments. Nonetheless,
the Committee is of the opinion that the proposed pre-paid fee structure is an
essential component of a robust regulatory system and the reputation of the
Australian education sector outweighs these concerns.
Record keeping
1.73
Schedule 6 of the ESOS Amendment (Tuition Protection Service and Other
Measures) Bill proposes new record keeping requirements for providers.
1.74
Some industry stakeholders urged the Government to ensure that the new
proposed requirements would not duplicate existing records keeping practices.
The Independent Schools Council of Australia argued:
Schools are already required under domestic registration and
accountability processes to keep extensive and detailed records of student
contact information and academic progress. Changes to record keeping requirements
should not in any way duplicate existing school practices.[41]
1.75
DEEWR explained:
There have been a number of provider closures over the last
two or three years … when closures have happened in the past one of the biggest
problems we have had in trying to place students has been accessibility to the
student records. Unless you know what the student studied, what the course
consisted of, it can be difficult for another college to offer them a place. It
will be difficult for the TPS director to actually identify another course…
In some cases colleges have closed and all the students have
found is a sign on the door saying, ‘It is now in the hands of the
administrator.’ In one case the administrator tried to charge us for the
student records and that held up being able to place those students for a
number of days while that issue was sorted out. So the measures that we have
taken here are an attempt to make sure in the students’ interest that we can
get hold of the records as much as possible. If there is an element of
duplication, personally, I would not be sorry because I would rather see the
records in more than one more place so that we can get them if the college
folds.[42]
1.76
The Committee agrees that maintenance of up to date records that are
accessible to the regulator is vitally important to securing full
acknowledgement of student achievement in the event of a provider default and
thus supports the measures proposed in Schedule 6.
General comment
1.77
A significant proportion of submissions supported the recommendations of
the Baird Review and the overall direction of the Government’s response to
these recommendations in the ESOS amendment bills under review by this inquiry.[43]
However, this inquiry uncovered a few details that, were they to pass into
legislation, would appear to place an unnecessary burden on service providers
while delivering little additional security to students and the Committee has
recommended that these areas be addressed.
1.78
The dilemma facing the Government was succinctly put by the Queensland
Department of Education and Training International:
One of the key aims of Baird report is to take a simplified
risk approach to managing the international education industry … but the
proposed ‘one size fits all’ approach to the minimisation of risk may have the inadvertent
effect of raising the level of risk for compliant (low risk) providers through
… onerous compliance elements…[44]
1.79
The Committee believes that the recommended amendments to the ESOS
Amendment (Tuition Protection Service and Other Measures) Bill will remove more
onerous compliance aspects of the measure while maintaining the advantages of a
simpler regulatory regime and the guarantee of security for overseas students.
1.80
The Committee acknowledges a level of nervousness at the detail of the
operation of TPS arrangements from some industry stakeholders[45]
and is aware that the proposed measures constitute a significant change to the
regulatory environment in which the industry operates and thus providers should
be ensured of full and comprehensive information on their new obligations.
Recommendation 4 |
|
The Committee recommends that following the passage of the
Education Services for Overseas Students bills, the Australian Government
ensures providers of education services to overseas students are provided
with comprehensive information on an on-going basis relating to the
implementation of the Tuition Protection Service arrangements. |
Recommendation 5 |
|
The Committee recommends that the House of Representative
pass the following bills:
n Education
Services for Overseas Students Legislation Amendment (Tuition Protection
Service and Other Measures) Bill 2011 with recommended amendments;
n Education
Services for Overseas Students (TPS Levies) Bill 2011; and
n Education
Services for Overseas Students (Registration Charges) Amendment Bill 2011 |