The Weekend Post

Unis lift bar for degrees

- ANTONIA O’FLAHERTY

UNIVERSITY courses will be harder to get into, with ATAR cut-offs predicted to spike thanks to a sky-rocketing demand for tertiary study and a cap on funded places.

Griffith University tertiary expert Stephen Billett said “without a doubt” the domestic student market would be more competitiv­e given the loss of internatio­nal students and the economic downturn of COVID-19.

And former Grattan Institute higher education program director and ANU professor Andrew Norton said amid COVID-19 there would be both increased tertiary applicatio­ns and fewer people deferring entry, meaning minimum entry cut-offs for courses could soar.

It comes as the Queensland Tertiary Admissions Centre has already recorded a staggering jump in applicatio­ns for university this year.

It experience­d the most applicatio­ns ever received on an opening day when admissions opened on August 4: 2918.

QTAC executive officer John Griffiths said the high applicant number was a good indicator there would be strong demand from the domestic market next year.

Dr Griffiths said there had been a 37.8 per cent increase in tertiary applicants compared with the same time in 2019, with a big increase from current Year 12 students.

About 6600 students had already applied for university admission next year and to receive their ATAR in December after registrati­ons for both opened on August 4, he said. Professor Norton said in recent years about 9-10 per cent of people who accepted university offers deferred by a year but it was expected fewer people would defer because of the impact of COVID-19 on travel and employment.

“So that will push a large number of higher ATAR students into wanting a place in 2021,” he said.

“And because ATARs are, in most cases, the interactio­n of supply and demand, that could well push up the minimum thresholds for some courses.”

Professor Billett said there would be greater competitio­n for courses with “identifiab­le occupation­s”, on top of a trend of young people seeking “clean, well-paid and secure employment”.

Medicine and law might become more difficult to access, he said.

And courses in physiother­apy, dietetics, speech pathology, occupation­al therapy, and engineerin­g could be the courses with a big increase in demand, Professor Billett said.

 ??  ?? WARNING: Ex-Grattan Institute higher education program director Andrew Norton.
WARNING: Ex-Grattan Institute higher education program director Andrew Norton.

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