This week’s Australia Study Weekly
by Nicole
As we all know, more and more international students are choosing Australia. This week the media reported that Australia will have 700,000–750,000 international students by the end of 2023! These huge numbers are further proof of the advantages of studying in Australia, so universities are working hard to attract international students and rolling out one favourable policy after another. This week has again brought a wave of good news. For tailored advice, message us any time.
In this issue — a sneak peek:
– Monash University’s November 2023 intake is now open! No need to wait another six months!
– More younger students are heading to Australia, and AEAS is adding test sittings at its Shanghai centre!
– Melbourne rises to the world’s 4th-best student city in the global QS rankings!
– Apply to study in Australia early — the University of Sydney and the University of Melbourne are raising their 2024 academic-average entry scores!
– A round-up of the business programmes our students and parents ask about most.
– Don’t forget to lodge your tax return at the end of the financial year! Late penalties can exceed a thousand dollars.
01
Monash adds a November intake!
Is your preferred programme on the list?
Good news! If you’d rather not wait another six months and want to study at Monash University — a Group of Eight (Go8) member ranked 42nd in the QS rankings — then its November 2023 intake is now open!!!
02
AEAS adds Shanghai test sittings
to meet rising demand from younger students!
For the Shanghai centre’s 29 July and August sittings, capacity rises from 15 to 25 candidates per session.The Beijing centre’s 19 August sitting is also about to fill up. So parents and students, be sure to register early. If you’re thinking of studying overseas and want your child to start secondary school sooner, message us any time — we’ll guide you from choosing a school all the way through, so your study journey runs smoothly.
03
QS official: Melbourne named
Australia’s best student city
Thursday brought major good news: official QS data ranks Melbourne the world’s 4th-best student city!!! Number one in all of Australia!!
A quick note: the QS rankings are a hugely useful reference for many students choosing where to study abroad. They help prospective students pick a country and a university, and major employers also use them when deciding whom to hire. QS stands for Quacquarelli Symonds. This QS Best Student Cities ranking covered 160 major study destinations, scoring each city across six dimensions: university rankings, affordability of tuition and courses, employer activity, student mix, and surveys of current students.
Of these, Melbourne ranked 4th and Sydney also placed highly. If you’re planning to study in Australia, message us to get more honest, gap-free data — we’ll map out everything clearly, from study through to migration.
04
Apply early
Sydney Uni and Melbourne Uni entry scores surge!
This was another hot topic this week: as Australia’s leading universities climbed the QS rankings, their entry scores rose too. For those of us who have worked in this field for years it’s nothing unusual — entry scores, like Australian tuition fees, are always quietly but inevitably creeping up.
Latest University of Sydney undergraduate requirements:
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Business 80% to 85%
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Economics 70% to 75%
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Architecture & Design 75% to 80%
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Education 70% to 75%
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Law 80% to 85%
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Engineering & Computer Science 70% to 75%
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-
To put this rise in context: in a province where the Gaokao is marked out of 750, getting into business at Sydney Uni now needs at least 638+ — on par with a Chinese “985” university cut-off.
At the same time, there is word that the University of Melbourne will revise its 2024 postgraduate entry requirements, with changes to the GPA needed for certain master’s pathways.Nothing is confirmed yet, so keep following Newstarsec for the latest.
05
A round-up of selected Go8 finance programmes
How to choose a finance programme among Australia’s Group of Eight is a question many prospective students ask, and which university has the best finance programme is a common parent question too. Lately many parents have been asking us: if we’re coming to Australia without planning to migrate, what should we study? How about finance? Is it manageable and a path to a PhD? Are its English requirements lower?
Although Newstarsec specialises in migration and tends to recommend migration-friendly fields with strong job prospects, offshore students and parents are especially keen on these “safe-in-any-weather, flexible-either-way” finance programmes. Here’s a quick round-up this week — for tailored advice, message us any time.
University of Melbourne:
Undergraduate:
Bachelor of Commerce (Finance)
(Finance) Master of Finance (Enhanced)
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University of Sydney:
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Monash University:
Banking and Finance
Financial Mathematics
Business (Finance)
Commerce (Finance)
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Australian National University
Financial Management
Applied Finance
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University of New South Wales
Financial Analysis
Financial Planning
Commerce (Finance)
Analytics MBA (Finance)
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University of Queensland (UQ)
Economics (Finance)
Advanced Finance and Economics
Financial Mathematics
International Economics and Finance
06
International students must lodge tax too
Late lodgement can mean a $1,000+ penalty!
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Tax File Number (TFN) -
Personal ID (e.g. passport) -
Bank account details -
Payment details from your employer (PAYG Payment Summary) -
Total bank interest (Interest) -
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For more details, see the official ATO website — or, when you consult us about studying abroad, we’ll see what we can help with. -
Top Australian University Offer Show
This week has again been full of offers across study programmes — call us your “study and migration planning authority” 😎, with offers and scholarships all round! Most are for the Early Childhood Graduate Diploma, plus more for OT and PT students! Get in touch for the details!
That’s our round-up of this week’s study news. For more, message us any time for first-hand information — so no information gap leaves you choosing the wrong programme or planning the wrong path.
Study abroad · Further study · Transfers
Secondary school university, TAFE and VET courses of all kinds
— contact Nicole to find out more!
Past favourites
Offshore applicants aged 35–44: the state-nomination shortcut to secure a Subclass 491 and aim for a Subclass 190!
Can a template-style visitor visa refusal be saved? If a DIY parent application is refused, can you reapply?
A golden window for offshore skilled migration — miss it and who knows how many years you’ll wait! Three pathways we recommend!
Migration news group
2023
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