China Daily

Melbourne university tops Australian ranking

- By XINHUA in Sydney

The University of Melbourne has once again been crowned as the best higher education institutio­n in Australia.

Figures released by Simon Birmingham, the federal minister for education, on Wednesday revealed that the University of Melbourne had the highest rate of degree completion­in the country at 88 percent between 2009 and 2014.

Margaret Sheil, acting vicechance­llor of the University of Melbourne, says the university’s completion rate came as a result of the institutio­n’s imposing requiremen­ts of students.

Sheil says the model had also given students flexibilit­y to “find their way” that had improved retention rates.

“The curriculum allows them to try different things,” she told Fairfax Media on Wednesday.

“Often they find something that is more appealing and more attractive. It opens up more opportunit­ies.”

The data also revealed that a third of university students nationwide were not completing their degrees within six years.

Victoria’s Federation University recorded the worst completion rate with just 52.5 percent of students who began their degrees in 2009 having finished them by 2014.

Marcia Devlin, Federation University’s deputy vice-chancellor of learning and quality, says Federation University being a regional institutio­n meant many students were mature-aged with families and a full-time job.

“They therefore have slower or lower completion rates than traditiona­l students, who are often unencumber­ed, child-free middle-class school leavers who either live at home free with mum and dad or whose family pays for them to live on campus. These are the typical Melbourne university students,” Devlin says.

“Regional universiti­es do the ‘heavy lifting’ in Australia in terms of enrolling students often from low socioecono­mic status background­s.”

The figures were released as thousands of secondary school graduates received the first round of university offers for 2017.

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