The Chronicle

USQ’s low result disputed

- Amy Lyne amy.lyne@thechronic­le.com.au

THE University of Southern Queensland has labelled a Federal Government report showing the university’s low completion rate as “misleading”.

The report by the Department of Education and training listed USQ as one of the worst when it came to students completing their degrees within a six-year period.

The latest figures showed just 42.5 per cent of students had completed their degrees from 2012-2015.

USQ vice-chancellor professor Geraldine Mackenzie said a number of factors were relevant in looking at how degree completion rates were calculated.

“The low six-year completion data used in the report does not take into account that many students studying in regional universiti­es like USQ are enrolled part-time and who have many other competing demands on their time,” she said. Highest - University of Sydney, University of NSW, Australian National University

Lowest - Federation University in Victoria, Charles Darwin University, University of Southern Queensland

“It’s the six-year completion time that the government is using to calculate completion rates that is the problem.

“We know from our own analysis that part-time students often take time away from study due to family commitment­s or for financial reasons but later return to university to finish their degree.

“Two thirds of our students are over the age of 25; over 40 per cent come from rural and remote areas. Our students might take longer to complete their degree but this does not mean they are unsuccessf­ul.”

In comparison to the gloomy figures, the 2018 Good Universiti­es Guide gave USQ a five-star rating as Queensland’s top university for full time graduate employment.

Prof Mackenzie said 82.5% of graduates found full-time employment within four months of finishing their course, well above the national average of 69.5 percent.

According to the Good University Guide, the median starting salary for USQ graduates is $61,000, the highest in Australia

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