Sunday, November 24, 2024

University of Melbourne to set up Micro-Campus in India

The set-up will be smaller than a full-fledged campus and would serve multiple functions, including offering professional education, conferences, and courses in hybrid modes

PRAVASISAMWAD.COM

Australia’s top-ranked higher educational institute, the University of Melbourne (UoM), will be setting up a micro-campus in India as early as next year. The set-up will be smaller than a full-fledged campus and would serve multiple functions, including offering professional education, conferences, and courses in hybrid modes.

In an exclusive interaction with News18.com, Professor Michael Wesley, Deputy Vice-Chancellor International, University of Melbourne, said: “We are looking at a permanent presence of University of Melbourne in India. It would be in the shape of a micro-campus in India and will offer joint degrees in partnership with good quality Indian universities and research institutes wherein a student could spend some part of their course in India and the remaining in Australia.”

The UoM has narrowed down the location of the micro-campus to Delhi, Mumbai or Bangalore. The programme will offer graduate-level courses, micro-credential courses, and professional certificates across a wide range. Some of the disciplines that the UoM is considering offering are applied data analytics, information technologies and public health.

These courses will be offered in flexible mode. Some parts of the courses, particularly the theoretical aspects, could be taught online. A significant portion, of course, will be taught in-person. While academics from Melbourne will fly down to India, the university is also considering roping in teachers and professors from top Indian institutes.

Australia already has a teacher training collaboration with the Savitribai Phule Pune University, wherein the two institutions offer a blended teaching degree from early childhood education. Suggesting Indian universities to increase the employability of their graduates, Wesley said: “Indian universities can look at offering work-integrated subjects wherein students are placed in industry as part of the curriculum.”

“Indian student population is diverse. With the micro-campus, we are aiming to reach the diverse student population which is beyond the groups of students who are already enrolled in our on-campus degrees. We are looking at offering flexible ways to provide world-class education as well as life-changing experience to diverse student population in India,” said Wesley.

He said that Indians were the second largest migration group in Australia after the British and Indians were expected to overtake the latter in four-to-five years. “Indian migrants are welcome because they speak good English, they have advanced skills and take part in Australian life and culture from day one and become valued,” he said, adding that Australia was looking to double the post-study work rights for students, which will help retain talent and offer easy permanent residency pathway to international students. Currently, Indian students get two years’ post-study work rights in Australia.

Australia already has a teacher training collaboration with the Savitribai Phule Pune University, wherein the two institutions offer a blended teaching degree from early childhood education. Suggesting Indian universities to increase the employability of their graduates, Wesley said: “Indian universities can look at offering work-integrated subjects wherein students are placed in industry as part of the curriculum.”

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Tirthankar Ghosh
Tirthankar Ghosh
Tirthankar Ghosh is a senior journalist and presently Managing Editor, Newsline Publications. He has also been writing for well over 15 years for the New York-based Air Cargo News Flying Typers.

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