Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

‘We cannot aim to be global without an active, focussed interest in India’

- LAURIE PEARCEY, pro-vc, University of New South Wales, Sydney Aishwarya Iyer

At 33, Laurie Pearcey, at Sydney’s University of New South Wales, is the youngest pro-vice-chancellor in Australian higher education. And he has his hands full. Part of his job involves attracting at least 4,000 Indian students to the university by 2025, under the university’s global impact strategy.

He’s had some experience – Pearcey has previously facilitate­d youth engagement between Australia and its Asian partners. Laurie was selected as a delegate to the 2018 Australia-india Youth Dialogue and sits on the advisory board of the Australia China Youth Associatio­n. There have been surprises along the way too. Pearcey discusses setting up the university’s India centre at New Delhi, his many visits to the country, and discoverin­g that we’re friendlier than he’d imagined.

What does an india centre mean for students and your institutio­n? The University of New South Wales had been active in India for 11 years now. Our flagship centre in George institute, New Delhi, is our hub for knowledge exchange. We will invite internatio­nal researcher­s, professors and academicia­ns for discussion panels.

With the guidance of experts in the sector, many students will be recruited to work on our research projects. Our faculty at the centre will reach out to companies for tie-ups and undertakin­g research in their field. We are also collaborat­ing with Indian universiti­es to facilitate our mission. We also intend to hold student exchange programmes through the centre.

Which indian universiti­es have you collaborat­ed with?

Our faculty members are actively working on projects with the Manipal Institute of Technology, Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies, and the IITS in Delhi, Bombay and Madras.

Students from these universiti­es work on research papers in fields ranging from engineerin­g and public health policy to green energy and innovation in global planning.

how many indian students currently study at unsw? do you have programmes where our students can participat­e remotely as well?

We cannot be a global university if we are not active and focussed in India. We have 21,000 internatio­nal students and 1,200 of them are Indians. Our ‘Future of Change’ scholarshi­ps have been of great help to students from India and China.

This year, we awarded scholarshi­ps of $5,000 to $10,000 to 61 students, including a full fee waiver for a Bengaluru medical graduate to pursue a two-year public health programme. In this digital world, students need not travel all the way from India to our college campus. We have many online certificat­e courses and a Masters in public health.

“our scholarshi­ps have Been of great help To students From india and China. This year alone, We awarded scholarshi­ps of $5,000 To $10,000 To 61 students, a FULL Fee Tuition Waiver included”

in the last three years, you have travelled to india 11 times. What have your experience­s been like?

I did not know what to expect in India, honestly. I had head that things don’t always work by the system - be it a small business or the government. But I was proved wrong by the thriving startup ecosystem. I also got interested in the extraordin­ary history and diverse cultures the country has fostered through the years..

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