This is a list of universities in Australia. The Commonwealth Higher Education Support Act 2003 sets out three groups of higher education providers. Students at all three types of institutions are eligible for FEE-HELP, an income contingent loan to cover charges and fees. [edit] Universities [edit] National - Charles Sturt University, Bathurst, Wagga Wagga, Albury, Dubbo, Manly, Orange, Canberra
- Macquarie University, Sydney
- University of New England, Armidale
- University of New South Wales, Sydney, Canberra, Singapore
- University of Newcastle, Newcastle, Callaghan, Ourimbah, Port Macquarie, Singapore
- Southern Cross University, Coffs Harbour, Lismore, Tweed Heads
- University of Sydney, Sydney
- University of Technology, Sydney
- University of Western Sydney
- University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Shoalhaven, Batemans Bay, Loftus, Moss Vale, Dubai
 - University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Parkville,
- Monash University, Melbourne (Clayton, Caulfield, Berwick, Peninsula, Parkville), Churchill (Gippsland) , Malaysia, South Africa
- Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Melbourne (CBD, Brunswick, Bundoora), Vietnam (Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City)
- Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne (Hawthorn, Lilydale, Prahran, Wantirna, Croydon), Malaysia (Sarawak)
- La Trobe University, Melbourne, Albury-Wodonga, Bendigo, Beechworth, Shepparton, Mildura, Mt Buller
- Deakin University, Geelong, Melbourne, Warrnambool
- University of Ballarat, Ballarat, Ararat, Horsham, Stawell
- Victoria University, Melbourne
 - Bond University, Gold Coast
- Griffith University, Brisbane, Logan and Gold Coast
- Central Queensland University, Bundaberg, Gladstone, Mackay, Rockhampton and Brisbane.
- James Cook University, Townsville, Brisbane, Singapore and Cairns
- University of Queensland, Brisbane, Ipswich and Gatton
- Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane
- University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba
- University of the Sunshine Coast, Sunshine Coast
- Central Queensland University, Rockhampton, Brisbane, Goldcoast, Melbourne, Mackay, Bundaberg, Emerald, Noosa, Sunshine Coast and Sydney
[edit] Other self-accrediting higher education institutions These institutions are for nearly all practical purposes, universities. However, they are deemed not to be because their academic focus is too narrow. [edit] State and territory accredited higher education institutions Each qualification these institutions offer must first be approved by the relevant state or territory authority. For the purposes of maintainability, the list below only aims to include institutions that create their own degree, masters or doctorate courses - not those that deliver courses created by others, or create only lesser courses. Links to full lists of Higher Education course originators can be found at the bottom of this section. Institutions that only deliver higher education courses created by another institution can be found via the parent institution listed. [edit] Government [edit] Specialist [edit] General [edit] Christian [edit] National [edit] New South Wales [edit] South Australia [edit] Tasmania [edit] Queensland [edit] Victoria [edit] Western Australia [edit] Other private [edit] Specialist - Adelaide Central School of Art
- Australian College of Applied Psychology, Sydney and Brisbane
- Australian College of Natural Medicine, Brisbane, Perth and Melbourne
- Australian College of Physical Education, Sydney
- Australian Guild of Music Education, Melbourne
- Australian Institute of Public Safety, Melbourne
- Australian Institute of Music, Sydney
- Australian International Hotel School, Canberra
- Australian National college, Melbourne
- Billy Blue College of Design, Sydney
- Brandon Raynor's School of Massage and Natural Therapies, Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth, Gold Coast
- Earth Institute, Sydney
- International College of Hotel Management, Adelaide
- Invisage, Brisbane
- Jansen Newman Institute, Sydney
- Jschool: Journalism Education & Training
- Kaylene Kranz and Associates, Adelaide
- Kollel Beth Hatalmud Yehuda Fishman Institute, Melbourne
- Le Cordon Bleu Australia, Adelaide
- Marcus Oldham College, Geelong
- National Institute of Health Sciences, Canberra
- Nature Care College, Sydney
- Oceania Polytechnic Institute of Education, Melbourne
- QANTM, Brisbane
- Raffles College of Design and Commerce, Sydney
- SAE Institute, Sydney, Byron Bay, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide, Perth
- Southern School of Natural Therapies, Melbourne
- William Blue College of Hospitality and Tourism, Sydney
[edit] General - Alexander Institute of Technology, Perth
- Gibaran Learning Group (incorporating Australian Institute of Business Administration, Entrepreneurship Institute Australia, and Tourism Institute Australia), Adelaide
- Holmes Institute, Melbourne
- ILM Australia, None. Although registered in Australia, it only delivers courses outside the country
- Navitas World, Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and various places in other countries
- Open Polytechnic of New Zealand, via an affiliate in Melbourne
[edit] Full listings Institutions operating in the external territories are auspiced by the Commonwealth Department of Education, Science and Training. However, there are none at this time (2005). [edit] Groupings of universities [edit] Rankings of universities 2008 Shanghai Jiao Tong University's academic ranking of world universities In 2008 the "Academic Ranking of World Universities" [1], produced by Shanghai Jiao Tong University's Institute of Higher Education, ranked Australian universities accordingly: | National Rank | University | Regional Rank (Asia Pacific) | World Rank | | 1 | Australian National University | 3 | 59 | | 2 | University of Melbourne | 6 | 73 | | 3 | University of Sydney | 8 | 97 | | 4 | University of Queensland | 9-16 | 101-151 | | 5 | University of Western Australia | 9-16 | 101-151 | | 6 | University of New South Wales | 17-22 | 152-200 | | 7 | Macquarie University | 23-41 | 201-302 | | 8 | Monash University | 23-41 | 201-302 | | 9 | University of Adelaide | 23-41 | 201-302 | | 10 | Flinders University | 42-68 | 303-401 | | 11 | James Cook University | 42-68 | 303-401 | | 12 | University of Newcastle | 42-68 | 303-401 | | 13 | University of Tasmania | 42-68 | 303-401 | | 14 | University of Wollongong | 42-68 | 303-401 |
2005 Teaching Performance Rankings (The Australian) This table shows the teaching standards in Australia universities and was published in The Australian newspaper. The scaling method used in preparing this league table had seven components: - CEQ (Course Experience Questionnaire) generic skills: 17.91%
- CEQ good teaching: 18.5%
- CEQ overall satisfaction: 18.9%
- Students in full-time employment after they graduate: 11.48%
- Those that go on to full-time study: 10.29%
- Drop-out or attrition rates: 10.65%
- Student progress or pass rates: 12.26%
| Rank | University | Score | | 1 | University of Wollongong | 34.24 | | 2 | Australian Maritime College | 30.79 | | 3 | University of Melbourne | 29.93 | | 4 | Swinburne University of Technology | 29.33 | | 5 | University of Queensland | 28.73 | | 6 | Australian National University | 26.95 | | 7 | University of New England | 25.56 | | 8 | University of Canberra | 24.25 | | 9 | University of Ballarat | 24.08 | | 10 | University of Sydney | 23.93 | | 11 | Murdoch University | 23.49 | | 12 | University of Western Australia | 23.42 | | 13 | Australian Catholic University | 22.73 | | 14 | Monash University | 22.16 | | 15 | RMIT University | 21.18 | | 16 | Macquarie University | 19.96 | | 17 | Charles Sturt University | 19.44 | | 18 | University of Technology, Sydney | 18.72 | | 19 | Victoria University | 18.65 | | Rank | University | Score | | 20 | University of the Sunshine Coast | 18.44 | | 21 | Deakin University | 18.35 | | 22 | Griffith University | 18.25 | | 23 | Edith Cowan University | 17.91 | | 24 | Curtin University of Technology | 17.45 | | 25 | University of Newcastle | 16.31 | | 26 | Flinders University | 16.02 | | 27 | University of Southern Queensland | 15.39 | | 28 | Southern Cross University | 14.83 | | 29 | RMIT | 14.49 | | 30 | James Cook University | 14.17 | | 31 | Queensland University of Technology | 13.67 | | 32 | University of New South Wales | 13.56 | | 33 | University of Western Sydney | 12.85 | | 34 | University of Tasmania | 12.00 | | 35 | Central Queensland University | 11.49 | | 36 | University of Adelaide | 10.54 | | 37 | University of South Australia | 10.11 | | 38 | Charles Darwin University | 9.05 |
2009 Times Higher Education Supplement Australian Rankings This list shows the international ranking of Australian universities that had been included in the top 100 universities as determined by the Times Higher Education Supplement | Rank | University | | 17 | Australian National University | | 36 | University of Melbourne | | 36 | University of Sydney | | 41 | University of Queensland | | 45 | Monash University | | 47 | University of New South Wales | | 81 | University of Adelaide | | 84 | University of Western Australia |
Asiaweek's Australian top ranking universities In 2000, Asiaweek ranked Asia's universities and grouped them according to whether they were a generalist Multi-Disciplinary or a Science and Technology university. [2] | Multi-disciplinary | | Rank | University | | 8 | Australian National University | | 9 | University of Melbourne | | 10 | University of New South Wales | | 13 | University of Sydney | | 23 | University of Western Australia | | 25 | University of Queensland | | 26 | University of Adelaide | | 30 | Monash University | | 45 | University of Wollongong | | 56 | Maquarie University | | Science and Technology | | Rank | University | | 22 | Curtin University of Technology | | 25 | Queensland University of Technology | | 26 | University of Technology, Sydney | | 28 | RMIT University | | 38 | University of South Australia |
In 1999, Asiaweek released the first regional listing of Asia's best universities. [3] Australian universities in the list and their rankings were: | Rank | University | | 8 | University of New South Wales | | 10 | University of Melbourne | | 13 | Australian National University | | 15 | University of Sydney | | 19 | University of Queensland | | 25 | University of Western Australia | | 34 | University of Adelaide | | 46 | Monash University | | 51 | Macquarie University | | 59 | University of Wollongong |
2005 Melbourne Institute International Standing of Australian Universities A study released by the Melbourne Institute [4] (operated by the University of Melbourne) in 2005 examined Australian universities on the basis of: - international standing of staff (40%)
- graduate programs (16%)
- undergraduate intake (11%)
- undergraduate programs (14%)
- resources (11%), and
- the views of Deans and CEOs (8%).
| University | Index | | Australian National University | 100 | | University of Melbourne | 100 | | University of Sydney | 93 | | University of Queensland | 87 | | University of New South Wales | 84 | | University of Western Australia | 77 | | Monash University | 75 | | University of Adelaide | 70 | | Flinders University | 55 | | La Trobe University | 55 | | Macquarie University | 55 | | University of Tasmania | 54 | | Murdoch University | 53 | | University of Newcastle | 53 | | University of Wollongong | 53 | | Curtin University of Technology | 50 | | Griffith University | 50 | | University of New England | 50 | | Deakin University | 49 | | University | Index | | James Cook University | 49 | | Queensland University of Technology | 49 | | University of Technology, Sydney | 47 | | University of South Australia | 46 | | RMIT University | 44 | | University of Canberra | 44 | | Southern Cross University | 41 | | Swinburne University of Technology | 41 | | University of Western Sydney | 41 | | Victoria University | 41 | | Charles Darwin University | 40 | | Edith Cowan University | 40 | | Central Queensland University | 39 | | Charles Sturt University | 39 | | University of Southern Queensland | 38 | | University of Ballarat | 37 | | Australian Catholic University | 36 | | University of the Sunshine Coast | 32 | | University of Notre Dame, Australia | 29 |
Ranking performance by other measures Universities can also be ranked by other measures - Academic disciplines
- Graduate satisfaction
- Graduate emploment prospects
- "Ranking Web of World Universities" [5]
[edit] See also [edit] External links
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