The Australian Senate is inquiring into "The rise in the number of Australian university graduates who struggle to find work after graduating". Normally I would have to compose a short pithy summary into what an inquiry is about. But in this case that is a direct quote from the very short terms of reference. The Senate Education and Employment References Committee has called for submissions by 5 June 2026, aiming to report by 20 November 2026.
The full terms of reference is:
"The rise in the number of Australian university graduates who struggle to find work after graduating, with particular reference to:
- the state of the entry-level job market for graduates;
- the quality of university education in Australia;
- whether graduates of Australian universities are being taught the skills that employers are looking for;
- the state of affairs in comparable jurisdictions;
- the economic, social and psychological effect that this experience has on graduates; and
- any other related matters"
Some have taken this as an attack on universities, that they are not teaching the right things. But these seem reasonable questions. The Australian community spend a lot on universities and need to be sure they are getting their moneys worth.
Improved assessment design can also help reduce the stress of study. I am one of those students who suffers stress in formal paper based examinations. As a result I spent my early university years failing, until I realized I could select courses and programs which did not have exams. This limited my choice, buy I was able to help expand the options in my own designing of courses and setting policies for accreditation for my profession.
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