The Gold Coast Bulletin

GOLD COAST’S BIG LEARNER EARNER

- RYAN KEEN AND BRIANNA MORRIS-GRANT

THE Gold Coast isn’t just Australia’s tourism capital — it is the country’s fastest growing hub for foreign students studying English.

The city’s popularity as an education hub is soaring for foreigners doing short courses, particular­ly English language tuition, with many on tourist or working holiday visas.

The Gold Coast has now officially become the fastest growing spot for English language students nationally, with a 26 per cent surge in numbers last year.

The majority were from Latin America and Spain.

Study Gold Coast CEO Shannon Willoughby said the city was emerging as the preferred destinatio­n for students from non-English speaking countries due to:

● The quality of the education.

● The destinatio­n’s holiday and lifestyle offering.

● Access to part-time employment while here.

Not only that, on average 70 per cent of the short-term students end up choosing to stay longer and completing more study once they get here.

“Our English language students often come over for a short period to learn intensive English and then the love affair begins and they choose to stay and complete further education,” Ms Willoughby said.

“This is why we are committed to building this market to help support a long-term sustainabl­e pipeline of students coming to the Gold Coast.”

The numbers and income associated with the sector speak for themselves.

Study Gold Coast data shows 25 per cent of all foreign students each get nine visits by family members and friends while here.

Each of those nine visits results in a stay on average of just over four nights, pumping $43 million into the economy.

The value nationally of internatio­nal education — with foreign students paying full fees — hit $32.2 billion for the 2017 calendar year, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

Australia hosted 624,001 internatio­nal students last year, a record number and a 12.7 per cent jump on 2016.

Ms Willoughby said on the Gold Coast the growth was even more significan­t with a 15.8 per cent increase and a total just shy of 30,000 internatio­nal students — and she added the city was “now well establishe­d as the English language capital of Queensland”.

The latest figures showed on the Gold Coast Brazilians had overtaken Chinese as the highest percentage of the city’s foreign students.

“A great number of the 5000 enrolled Brazilians are (enrolled as) English Language Intensive Courses for Overseas Students (ELICOS) and increasing­ly they are being joined by many others from Latin America,” Ms Willoughby said.

“Our climate and lifestyle are two of the big drawcards for those students but our high quality education is just as important.”

Australia had 155,448 ELICOS students in 2017 with 6500 on the Gold Coast. More than 4000 foreign students on the Gold Coast were on a tourist or working holiday visa.

Brown’s English Language School assistant director of studies Marcell Buist said the weather seemed to be the main thing drawing students to the Gold Coast, but there was more than that keeping them here.

“There’s an easygoing lifestyle they’re attracted to in Australia.

“They really just come out here, learn English and have a great holiday,” she said.

“We have a lot of students re-enrolling after they’ve come here for a certain period of time, and extending their visas when they want to stay longer.”

Destinatio­n Gold Coast chairman Paul Donovan said education had become a crucial tourism driver for the city with a “three-pronged marketing attack” by Study Gold Coast, universiti­es and English language schools paying off.

“Long-term, their parents come and visit a couple of times a year, often they buy a property for the student to stay in while here and some decide to live here.

“It is adding hugely to the economy,” he said.

“We also have three universiti­es here now spending an inordinate amount of money overseas marketing themselves and the destinatio­n.” Donovan said.

English language students come — and the love affair starts

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Study Gold Coast CEO Shannon Willoughby

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