Australian universities welcome snap decision by China to ban online studies

Move would encourage an estimated 40,000 Chinese students to return to Australia

China’s education ministry has announced a ban on Chinese citizens studying at 
foreign universities online.


Australian Associated Press  Sun 29 Jan 2023, Last modified on Mon 30 Jan 2023 
11.54 AEDT

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2023/jan/29/australian-universities-welcome-snap-decision-by-china-to-ban-online-studies

The Australian university sector has welcomed a snap Chinese government ban on 
citizens studying at foreign universities online.

The chief executive of Universities Australia, Catriona Jackson, said the move 
would encourage some 40,000 Chinese students to return to Australia but warned 
there would be logistical hurdles.

“We will be working closely with government and industry to ensure universities 
can quickly respond to this influx and facilitate the safe return of students 
from China as well as students from other nations,” Jackson said on Sunday.

China’s education ministry announced the ban on Saturday, instead telling its 
citizens to return to overseas campuses, News Corp reported on Sunday.

Australia’s education sector took a financial hit at the start of the Covid-19 
pandemic when border closures forced full-fee paying international students to 
return home. Since then, some universities have convinced Chinese nationals to 
continue studying at Australia universities online while still paying full fees.

Jackson said education was Australia’s largest service export, bringing $40bn 
into the economy in 2019.

“Working back to this position of strength we held prior to the pandemic is in 
the interest of universities and our nation,” she said.

The University of Sydney said it was working to get the majority of students 
back by the semester one in the first half of the year, before returning to 
face-to-face classes in semester two.

“We are aware of the short-term logistical challenges and will be working with 
the Australian government on this,” a university spokesperson said.

The sudden ban on online study follows a cooling of relations between Beijing 
and Canberra since Labor took office in May last year.

China’s ambassador to Australia, Xiao Qian, said earlier this month “bad 
political relations” had contributed to students’ reluctance to come to 
Australia.

However, more stability in the relationship should see that trend reversed, he 
said.

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