Australia should introduce a registration system for education agents to prevent ābad actorsā sullying the reputation of international education, according to a report.
The register would need to be compulsory, with government oversight āessentialā to ensure ācredibility and consistent uptakeā.
Authorities must also make better use of existing regulation to stamp out misbehaviour ā particularly poaching, which it says is best managed through enforcement of the current rules along with imposition of new visa requirements.
The , by Melbourne consultants Edified, acknowledges Canberraās ājurisdictional limitationsā in controlling agents outside Australia. Nevertheless, government agencies could boost the āeffectiveness of existing safeguardsā through more rigorous policing.
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āEnforcement is uneven,ā the report says. āBad actors can continue to operate through gaps in oversight, data visibility and accountability.ā
It recommends āroutineā site visits to Australian schools, colleges and universities, combined with more active monitoring of their compliance with regulations in the Education Services for Overseas Students (Esos) Act and the National Code of Practice for Providers of Education and Training to Overseas Students.
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But educational institutions must also contribute through data sharing and āstudent feedback loopsā. And they must be held accountable for the behaviour of the agents they enlist.
The report was commissioned in November by the International Education Association of Australia (IEAA), which had assembled a committee to scrutinise education agentsā behaviour amid escalating integrity concerns.
Chief executive Phil Honeywood said Canberra had made agent governance and integrity a key priority, and the IEAA wanted to equip the government with āa way forwardā¦informed by global best practiceā.
The report offers three models for the proposed register of agents. IEAA vice-president Jonathan Chew, chief insights officer at Navitas, said the report did not ājump to any conclusionsā about which option was best.
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Instead, it āprovides a menu of measured and meaningful regulatory models,ā Chew said. āThe detail is there to inform future analysis and consultation.ā
The basic model features a compulsory register managed by government and co-designed by international education operators and representatives. Agents could be deregistered for non-compliance, while institutions would sign on to a code of ethics and ābaselineā training.
Under the second model, the register would be āsearchableā and agents would have to renew their registration every two years. Reporting of agentsā non-compliance would be mandatory, data sharing would be encouraged and training would be more extensive.
The third model would feature publication of agentsā registration status and monitoring of their compliance. āSub-agentsā and individual counsellors would be listed on the register, training would be ongoing and data sharing would be handled through a centralised platform.
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The register could be managed within the Department of Education to ensure access to āexisting Esos enforcement leversā and data on students and providers. āThe framework should be scalable, beginning with a light-touch approach and building over time as needed,ā the report says.
It says Australiaās regulation of international education is āmatureā and ācomprehensiveā, but āregulation alone is insufficient when enforcement is inconsistent and system gaps can be exploited.
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āThe quality of education agent practice is largely managed through private, bilateral arrangements between institutions and agencies. This can result in fragmented oversight with limited transparency. [We need] greater visibility of the scale of the issue.ā
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