Work, the Postgraduate Exam, or Study Abroad? How to Answer This Life Choice

According to the 2023 Postgraduate Admissions Survey Report released by China Education Online, national postgraduate-exam (kaoyan) registrations in 2023 continued their slow climb, reaching 4.74 million. While that is still 170,000 more applicants than in 2022, the growth rate has eased compared with the previous year: the 2021-2022 rise was 21%, whereas the 2022-2023 increase has gradually levelled off.

Even with slower growth and expanding intakes, the postgraduate-exam landscape remains fiercely competitive. Many domestic universities have seen record-high applicant numbers, meaning every candidate faces an intense contest — and many are now weighing up what to do next.

But the postgraduate exam is not the only path — postgraduate study overseas opens another door. If you have finished your undergraduate degree but want to keep lifting your qualifications and would like a plan B ready, studying in Australia has long been a popular plan B — not only for its pleasant climate and safe environment, but also for the strong overall standing of its universities on the world stage. With the migration outlook steadily improving post-pandemic, the prospect of study-to-migration has become one of the main draws. Today’s article may give you a clear answer.

To start with, we can plan your choice of university around three study-abroad goals:

01

Study overseas to lift your qualifications

02

Study, migrate and secure Australian PR

03

Apply to several countries and pick the best offer

Study overseas to lift your qualifications

If your main reason for postgraduate study is to lift your qualifications and open up wider career options back home, then top-ranked Australian universities are the obvious choice. The good news is that across both the QS and Times rankings, the Group of Eight (Go8) universities are highly competitive — particularly in business, humanities and social sciences, IT and engineering.

Here is a quick rundown of what makes each Go8 application distinctive, so you can find the right fit and choose the Go8 university best suited to you.


Australian National University (ANU)

The only truly national public university. Its science and engineering programmes are solid, but humanities and social sciences are its real strength. If your English isn’t strong, this isn’t the place to chance it — without a qualifying language score, your application simply won’t be considered, so make sure you apply with a score that already meets the requirement.


University of Melbourne

A perennial rival of the University of Sydney. Many programmes require a relevant undergraduate background and a GMAT score, and some also call for reference letters. Be warned: offers come through extremely slowly — the processing pace is famously relaxed.


University of Sydney

Hugely popular with international students thanks to its strong reputation back home. It suits graduates of 985/211 universities whose grades aren’t especially high — a GPA of 75-80 is enough to apply for certain programmes, for example:

Master of Media Practice

Master of Project Management

Master of Economics

and so on……………….


University of New South Wales (UNSW)

Home to one of Australia’s largest engineering faculties, with a strong business school as well. It has campuses in both Sydney and Canberra, so if you’re aiming for PR through ACT state nomination but can’t get into ANU and aren’t keen on the University of Canberra, this is well worth considering.


University of Queensland (UQ)

Highly ranked yet not overly demanding. Graduates of 985/211 universities can apply with confidence, and if you care about QS rankings but your background isn’t strong, it’s worth a try. Work experience is a plus, and reference letters help too. Set in Brisbane, Queensland, the campus is stunning, the climate is lovely and it’s close to the Gold Coast — a great place to both study and live.


Monash University

It holds the three major business-school accreditations, and doesn’t mind at all if you graduated from a “non-985/211” university. For students who can’t compete for places in the UK, Canada or the US, this is where you can achieve your goals and gain admission to a strong university even with modest grades.


University of Western Australia (UWA)

It isn’t fussy about high grades — a weighted average of 60 or above meets the basic requirement. Business programmes, however, are more demanding, with some requiring a GMAT score of 550 or higher.

University of Adelaide

One of the more forgiving and welcoming of the Go8. It is also the only Go8 public university offering a diploma-to-master’s pathway, so graduates of non-985/211 universities can apply with confidence.If you’re thinking about migrating to Australia down the track, it’s an even better fit, as South Australia’s state-nomination policy includes a graduate pathway that favours local graduates.

Entry requirements vary from programme to programme — message us for the details and we’ll tell you everything we know!


Study, migrate and secure Australian PR

If your goal is study-to-migration, prioritise universities that offer good value for money, accredited courses and a regional location.

Good value for money: expensive tuition doesn’t earn you any migration points after graduation, so if rankings aren’t your priority, feel free to choose a lower-cost university. Here is a roundup of great-value hidden-gem universities in each state and territory for your reference:

NSW: University of Wollongong

VIC: Victoria University

QLD: Southern Cross University, Central Queensland University

Canberra: University of Canberra

SA: University of South Australia

WA: Edith Cowan University

NT: Charles Darwin University

TAS: University of Tasmania


Accredited courses: for many occupations — such as nursing, early childhood education and social work — you can apply for a skills assessment as soon as you graduate. Choosing a course accredited by the relevant assessing authority can speed up your skills-assessment application and fast-track you onto the skilled-migration pathway.


Regional areas: as is well known, studying in a regional area earns you an extra 5 points, and overall the living costs and tuition fees in regional areas tend to be lower too, easing the financial pressure.


Ideally you’d tick all of these boxes. Since the pandemic, post-study work-visa policies have kept improving, and the next few years are sure to be the prime window for study-to-migration in Australia. Seizing the chance to migrate to Australia starts right now, with the university and major you choose to study.


The most popular migration-friendly majors are still mainly IT, engineering, social work, early childhood education and nursing. Beyond these popular options, a number of other majors can also lead to study-to-migration, but they require work experience. When choosing a major, look beyond migration prospects and factor in your own interests and strengths — after all, career development matters too. Our advice is to weigh up your own situation and confidently choose a major you’re “confident in” and that “offers a migration pathway”.

Apply to several countries and pick the best offer


As the pandemic recedes, study-abroad services worldwide are working to return to pre-pandemic levels, and many students apply to several countries at once and then pick the best option. After all, most people assume that Australia’s universities rank, overall, behind those of the UK, the US and Canada — and since most Australian study-abroad applications are now free, many students want to create as many options as possible up front before making a final decision.


But! Australian universities — the Go8 in particular — still rank very attractively. Students who graduated from a non-985/211 university with modest grades and a weaker background can only get into average-ranked schools in the UK, yet in Australia they can aim for far higher-ranked universities. Since a degree’s value ultimately comes down to the university’s ranking anyway, you may as well choose Australia, with its pleasant climate.


Secondly, Australia offers international students very generous post-study work-visa options. After completing a master’s, you get at least three years of work rights, with an extra 1-2 years in regional areas, for up to 5 years of work rights in total.Even if you don’t plan to migrate, you’ll build up overseas work experience — and back home, that makes you a far stronger candidate in the job market.

Finally, there’s Australia’s migration policy. The EOI points table clearly favours students who have studied in Australia: two years of study in Australia earns points, studying in a regional area earns points, and PY (Professional Year) coursework earns points too. Add it all up, and the migration advantage over offshore applicants is considerable.


Space is limited here, and study-abroad planning has to be tailored one-on-one to each person’s interests, strengths and goals — what suits someone else won’t necessarily suit you. For a plan that’s right for you, let us help — add our consultant on WeChat to discuss the details.


Whether you pursue postgraduate study at home or study abroad, we sincerely wish every candidate the very best in reaching your goals and successfully advancing your studies!



Past articles worth a read

ACT policy shake-up! 128 more occupations — a major boost for offshore applicants and Subclass 491!

NSW Subclass 190 latest round: invitations as low as 65 points! These occupations are getting invited with ease

VIC latest round of invitations: 75 raw points secures Subclass 190 for IT, 85 points for accounting!

Migration news sharing group


2023 


Step 1: Press and hold to add our client adviser

Step 2: Once added, please


Study · Migration · Visas — we’re the professionals



Attention!please make sure you connect with a genuine NewStars consultant!


Study and migration enquiries — client advisers by location


Sydney

Melbourne

Canberra

Brisbane

Adelaide

Hobart

Beijing

Guangzhou

Follow NewStars on WeChat

Reply on our WeChat account with any of the numbers below or any keyword (in the chat, not in the comments under the article), to get the most timely, professional migration updates! Reply [A] to view the directory (covering every topic)!

Reply: 0000 → view the 16 Nov policy update (Subclass 491 + skilled-migration points)

Reply: 000 → latest visa / citizenship processing wait times

Reply: 001 → latest Subclass 189 EOI official report

Reply: 002 → Subclass 189 Skilled Independent migration

Reply: 003 → Subclass 190 state nomination by state

Reply: 004 → Subclass 489 regional state nomination

Reply: 005 → business and investor migration for international students

Reply: 006 → parent migration visa

Reply: 007 → employer-sponsored visa

Reply: 008 → Subclass 485 visa

Reply: 009 → partner migration / points

Reply: 010 → work-experience points

Reply: 011 → PY (Professional Year) points

Reply: 012 → NAATI / CCL points

Reply: 013 → regional-study points

Reply: 014 → visitor and family-visit visa

Reply: 015 → working holiday visa

Reply: 016 → TAFE study

Reply: 017 → Canada migration for Australian international students

Reply: 018 → Subclass 407 Training visa

Reply: 019 → Subclass 408 Temporary Activity visa

Reply: 020 → New Zealand migration

2023 recommended