India, Australia sign agreements on student transfer, research, funding at IIT Gandhinagar
Deakin University signed agreements with IIT Gandhinagar and NSDC; Monash University with IIT Hyderabad.
R. Radhika | November 6, 2023 | 02:56 PM IST
NEW DELHI: To foster collaborations in education and skills training, the education ministers of India and Australia held the first-ever Australia India Education and Skill Council (AIESC) meeting on Monday.
Held at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Gandhinagar, the meeting was jointly chaired by the union education and skill development minister Dharmendra Pradhan, and Jason Clare MP, Australian minister for education, and Brendan O'Connor, Australian minister for skills and training.
Pradhan said that the meeting marked progress in mutual recognition of qualifications, establishment of a joint working group, joint skill collaborations, partnerships between higher educational institutions on joint degrees, capacity building of teachers, collaborations in early childhood care and education, study in India, visas for Indian students and research scholars, among others.
The Indian education minister further announced that the two countries have reviewed their bilateral cooperation in education and skilling and agreed to further strengthen knowledge and skilling partnerships for greater mobility and employability. “In the areas of agriculture, water management, healthcare more research, student and faculty exchange programmes, dual degree, joint degree will be there because of these agreements,” said Pradhan.
Also Read| UGC allows foreign university campuses in India to offer offline courses, repatriate profits
Australian degree in India
The two ministers also presented different agreements between India and Australian higher educational institutions. Australia’s Innovative Research Universities (IRU) – a network of six public universities – will explore the possibility of offering their degrees to Indian students within India. The IRU includes Flinders University, Griffith University, James Cook University, La Trobe University, University of Canberra and Western Sydney University.
Deakin University , one of the first Australian universities to open campuses in India, signed an agreement with IIT Gandhinagar. The partnership will focus on mobility, faculty exchange and a joint doctoral research programme. It will also provide opportunities for bilateral funding for workshops and conferences. The collaboration will also pave the way for IIT Gandhinagar students to transfer into higher studies and research at Deakin University in both Australian and the GIFT City campuses.
The Deakin University and National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC) will launch an online “job-readiness programme”. The programme will be a pathway to a degree programme in Deakin University with the help of course credits.
Monash University signed an agreement with IIT Hyderabad. They will focus on research on critical minerals among other areas.
On his second visit to India, Clare said: “India is embarking on a nation changing path. India has set a challenge for us to be partners in India’s endeavour to increase student participation in higher education. There are 450 research partnerships between India and Australia and we have added four more today. Tomorrow we will get to see the Deakin and Wollongong campus being built in the gift city. Setting up a campus provides an opportunity for Indian students to get a quality education at half the price,”
Clare and Pradhan will visit the new campuses of The University of Wollongong and Deakin University in GIFT City tomorrow.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Study Abroad: ‘We will continue to attract students from India,’ says VC, University of Queensland
Study in Australia: University of Queensland has announced a ‘High Achievers Scholarship’ for Indians. The study abroad scholarship will cover 20% of the tuition. Eligibility, visa regulations, courses and more.
Pritha Roy ChoudhuryFeatured News
]- Maharashtra Election 2024: State’s job scheme stumbles; just 21% apprentice placements in private firms
- ‘First-of-its-kind’: IIT Madras, IIM Udaipur, IIIT Nagpur hostels to be built in PPP-mode
- IIM Calcutta, Delhi, XLRI: How management schools are planning new ways to improve NIRF ranking in research
- Study Abroad: India beats China in race for US education, leads with 3.31 lakh students, says report
- Delhi University students, teachers demand removal of principal accused of slapping Dalit student
- These MBA specialisations are seeing a surge in demand, jobs
- Education News This Week: Fake news on CBSE exams; UPPSC protests, crackdown on coaching ads
- CAT 2024 and a day on campus: How Nirma University plans MBA admissions
- NEET PG Counselling: Telangana’s domicile rules leave hundreds with ‘nowhere to go’; over 70 move court
- MBA courses in healthcare management, hospital administration growing popular