ACER Logo

HomeAbout ACER Media Centre

Media Centre



Contact us

Corporate Communications Manager
Steve Holden

19 Prospect Hill Road, Camberwell VIC, Australia 3124

T: (03) 9277 5582
F: (03) 9277 5500
E: communications@acer.edu.au

Indigenous students highly engaged with university study

Posted on:Thursday, 5th May 2011

MEDIA RELEASE
For immediate release Thursday 5 May 2011

Indigenous university students experience similar or higher levels of satisfaction and engagement with learning than their non-Indigenous peers, according to the latest briefing paper from the Australasian Survey of Student Engagement (AUSSE).

The new analysis also reveals that Indigenous students rate their relationships with other students and teaching staff just as positively as non-Indigenous students do and are significantly more likely to report positive relationships with administrative staff.

Yet despite such positive findings, Indigenous students are significantly more likely to seriously consider leaving their current institution prior to completing their studies.

The paper focuses on the responses of more than 500 Indigenous Australian students, collected as part of the 2009 administration of AUSSE. It is co-authored by Dr Christine Asmar, Senior Lecturer at Murrup Barak, the Melbourne Institute for Indigenous Development at the University of Melbourne, and Associate Professor Susan Page, Director of Macquarie University’s Warawara Department of Indigenous Studies.

“The puzzle is that, while Indigenous students are enthusiastic about their studies, and are engaged on similar or higher levels than their peers, they remain more likely to seriously consider leaving,” said Associate Professor Page.

Around 37 per cent of Indigenous students and 29 per cent of non-Indigenous students report that they plan to or have seriously considered leaving their current institution before finishing their qualification. Importantly, the analysis found that Indigenous students who report a high level of support from their institutions are significantly less likely to have departure intentions than those who report a low level of support.

One third of students’ comments rated Indigenous centres as among the ‘best aspects’ of how their universities engaged them in learning, leading the authors to conclude that such centres play a vital supporting role. They note, however, that more data is needed on this aspect of Indigenous engagement.

“We have a clear picture of what Indigenous students think about university, but much less idea of why they think it,” said Dr Asmar. “Tapping into the ‘hidden stories’ of Indigenous engagement and success will help to better inform our efforts to attract, support, engage and retain our Indigenous students.”

AUSSE is a collaboration between ACER and participating universities. The full briefing, Dispelling myths: Indigenous students’ engagement with university, is available from http://ausse.acer.edu.au 

****************ENDS*************

Media enquiries: Megan Robinson, Journalist and Corporate Communications Officer

Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER)
Phone: (03) 9277 5582
Mobile: 0419 340 058
Email: media@acer.edu.au


Related links

AUSSE website

Download this media release as PDF

You might also like to read:

Quantifying the return on investment of workplace training

Improving our understanding of learning

Australian students rate their university experience positively

Time to reform educational assessment

Low SES student enrolment target may be within reach

International study reveals serious adult literacy and numeracy problems

Philanthropic support: a big knowledge gap for schools


« Go back to media releases list

Search in media releases


Upcoming events

NAB Schools First masterclasses - NSW
May 2013

NAB Schools First masterclasses - QLD
May 2013

ACER Expo
Jun 2013

See more events »

Follow us on...

Follow us on facebook Follow us on twitter Subscribe to RSS feed

Join our mailing list

Name:

Email:


Higher education update
Higher education update


Research Developments

International Update
International Update


ACER eNews April 2013