Australian universities face ‘ cold winter’ due to fraught ties with China
Due to fraught China- Australia ties, Australian universities may suffer a “cold winter,” as seven top universities in Australia are at risk of losing their rankings in the QS World University Rankings 2021 due to their “over- reliance” on Chinese students, according to the Daily Mail on Monday.
The seven are the Australian National University ( ANU), the University of Sydney ( USYD), the University of Melbourne ( UofMELB), the University of New South Wales ( UNSW), the University of Queensland ( UQ), Monash University ( MONASH) and the University of Western Australia ( UWA), which are all in the the Group of Eight ( Go8).
Liang Zeyue, an overseas study consultant, told the Global Times that QS rankings are important for Chinese students in seeking employment after graduation.
“Residency policies and companies' needs in China can determine the student enrollment rates for oversea universities,” said Liang. The residency policies for Shanghai state that the graduate university must be within the QS top 500, and some government departments may have an even higher standard of QS top 200, said Liang.
Li Chen, founder of an overseas study consultant business in Yinchuan, Northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, said that the methodology for QS rankings has six indicators: academic peer review, faculty/ student ratio, citations per faculty, employer reputation, international student ratio and international staff ratio.
“The lack of Chinese students may directly affect the indicators for the international student and staff ratios, which account for 10 percent in total,” said Li. She said that universities like UQ, MONASH and UWA — which are relatively low in the rankings — may fall out of the top 100. The top three universities ( ANU, USYD and UofMELB) may still be ranked in the top 100.