Australia flags limited opening of campuses, borders

‘Three-step plan’ would allow gradual increases to class sizes, with borders inched open for foreign students

May 8, 2020
Group of open doors on parched earth
Source: iStock

Students will be eased back on to Australian campuses and international students could be allowed into the country from July, under plans agreed by the country’s governments.

A “three-step pathway” for relaxing coronavirus-related restrictions, outlined by prime minister Scott Morrison following an 8 May meeting with the state premiers and territory chief ministers, could see students back in classes almost immediately.

Universities would be expected to “increase face-to-face where possible” and “prioritise hands-on, skills-based learning”. Students could be permitted to gather in groups of 10 in the first phase, rising to 20 in stage 2 and 100 in stage 3, with universities’ residential colleges also reopened at that juncture.

Mr Morrison said states and territory governments would decide when to introduce each phase, but the aim was for all jurisdictions to be into the third stage in July.

ADVERTISEMENT

Gatherings of up to 100 would become the “new normal” for as long as the virus remained a threat, with mass gatherings and international travel subjected to ongoing restrictions. But international students could be exempted as “exceptions, not the rule”.

“They’d have to be carefully tested,” Mr Morrison stressed. “It has to be done according to those strict quarantine restrictions. We would be working with institutions to see how that could be achieved…and how those costs are met. But we’re open to everything, pretty much, to get the Australian economy back and firing again as much as possible.”

ADVERTISEMENT

South Australian premier Steven Marshall and New Zealand education minister Chris Hipkins have also suggested that their borders could be opened to international students, who would be placed under supervised quarantine for a fortnight on arrival.

Australian National University policy expert Andrew Norton said the approach was sensible. “Without a broader re-opening of borders there [would] be few commercial flights, so charters would be an efficient way of getting students here and into whatever quarantine arrangements are needed.”

Representative body Universities Australia said it was keen to welcome all students back to face-to-face teaching when it proved safe. “Universities have been working closely with government and health authorities around a carefully staged return to campus,” said chief executive Catriona Jackson.

She said the governments’ plans would allow an “early focus” on small and laboratory-based classes. “Students and staff are eager to restart face-to-face learning, but a cautious and gradual approach will be taken. The detailed arrangements will differ from university to university, and from state to state.”

ADVERTISEMENT

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Register
Please Login or Register to read this article.

Related articles

Reader's comments (3)

International students are better off staying back in their home countries and learning from their instructors here in Australia online. Given that ninety per cent of covid infections in this country have been due to international students coming into this country and spreading the virus, Australians will be wary of opening borders to international students too soon especially when asymptomatic cases are as virulent as those with visible symptoms. The Australian community may also refuse to welcome international students and they have already shown and said and supported their governments saying that international students must go back to their home countries. The fact that cash strapped international students are having to share accommodation with more people than probably ideal also leads to hygiene and health issues inadvertently that may be a cause for concern. Most of all, international student enrolment has always been contingent on immigration intake and it is certain that immigration will be closed off for the next 5 years to accommodate local population in new jobs. Any conversation of international students has to be said in the context of immigration intake and international students will not be coming here to study until they are offered immigration after they study. Consequently international student enrolment will fall dramatically as this fault line of student migration nexus is exposed. The bright side of the story is the few international students that will come will be the best and the ones that will come here to study only and that few will go back home after their studies as is expected and achieve much name for the education sector here in Australia. So let’s focus on quality international students and not just numbers.
The Corona Virus has come into Australia by people that have returned from overseas travelling, not international students. Most cases have come from Australians returning from overseas holidays and the cruise ships. We need to have international students here for the universities to survive and the education they bring. The international students are being discriminated as "cash strapped- poor health", our own Australian students experience the same, living away from home, working and doing a degree. We need to focus on working together.
The Corona Virus has come into Australia by people that have returned from overseas travelling, not international students. Most cases have come from Australians returning from overseas holidays and the cruise ships. We need to have international students here for the universities to survive and the education they bring. The international students are being discriminated as "cash strapped- poor health", our own Australian students experience the same, living away from home, working and doing a degree. We need to focus on working together.

Sponsored

ADVERTISEMENT