Efforts to boost the number of underprivileged Australians in higher education should be extended to half the population, a Brisbane conference has heard.
Grattan Institute higher education analyst Andrew Norton said that the threshold currently used to define low socioeconomic status students â those from the most economic disadvantaged quarter of neighbourhoods â was set too low.
Mr Norton said that the next most disadvantaged quartile of areas was âsociologically very similarâ to those in the bottom group. âWeâre focusing on only half of the genuine equity population,â he told the Australian Financial Review Higher Education Summit.
âThe most transformative thing you could do would be [target] the bottom 50 per cent rather than the bottom 25 per cent.â
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Under Australiaâs proposed performance-contingent funding scheme, which the government hopes to finalise in the coming days, universities will qualify for additional teaching grants by recruiting specified proportions of their students from underprivileged neighbourhoods.
But Mr Norton said that universities had already been doing âa huge amountâ to attract students from lower socioeconomic backrounds. âYouâve got to ask what things could still be done that havenât already been done,â he said.
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He said that widening the low-SES measure would also be fairer for universities situated too far from underprivileged neighbourhoods to have realistic prospects of recruiting many of their residents. âYou have to be realistic about where people live,â he said.
In a submission to the review panel that devised the scheme, Mr Norton quotes Australian Bureau of Statistics figures showing that a little over 30 per cent of young people in moderately disadvantaged areas went to university. This was only marginally above the 25 per cent participation rate in the poorest neighbourhoods, and well below the rate of almost 80 per cent in the richest parts of the country.
âAlthough there is room for debate about exactly what constitutes educational disadvantage, there is a case for including the lowest 50 per cent of regions,â the submission says.
It says a reclassification of low-SES to include neighbourhoods in the second bottom decile would help ensure that universitiesâ performance in addressing disadvantage was âproperly recorded or rewardedâ.
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