The scandal-plagued university offering students up to $5000 to enrol
The Australian National University has been beset by controversy for 18 months. Now it is trying a new tactic to win back students.
The Australian National University is offering cash handouts of up to $5000 for students to enrol in a single subject to shore up flagging demand after 18 months of scandals, headlines and resignations eroded its once-stellar reputation.
In an Australian first, ANU last week sent letters to people who had applied to study in semester 1 but had either been rejected or had chosen not to take up their place. The letter contained information on a new “ANU Access and Transition Bursary” for previous applicants if they enrolled in a single subject for semester 2, which starts on July 21.
People who live more than 100 kilometres from the ANU campus in Canberra are eligible for $5000, while those who live closer will be paid $3000.
Students do not have to put in a fresh application and must still be enrolled on August 31, after which the money will automatically be transferred.
“We would like to invite you to consider commencing at ANU in Semester 2, 2026,” the letter reads. “ANU is committed to helping you find the right program pathway aligned to your interests and your ANU selection rank.”
One student who received the letter said they had applied to study music, but the ongoing turmoil at the university, especially concerning the music program, persuaded them not to risk it.
“I was concerned that if I enrolled, halfway through my course it would change,” said the student, who asked not to be identified. The student, 18, who lives in Canberra, subsequently enrolled at the University of Canberra. Several of their friends also received the letter.
The letter contends that recipients were “not eligible for an offer” for the course they applied for in semester 1. The Herald is aware of letters that were sent to applicants who were accepted for semester 1 but rejected their offer and chose to go elsewhere.
Higher education policy expert Andrew Norton from Monash University said the move “reeked of desperation”.
“ANU was over-enrolled in 2024, and for it now to be making such offers is very unusual. I’m speechless,” Norton said.
While it is not unusual for universities to offer similar bursaries or scholarships to attract students with very high ATARs or from equity backgrounds, it was unprecedented that a university would cast such a broad net, he said.
“I guess they are hoping they can generate more money than it costs,” Norton said.
ANU declined to respond to questions about the bursary. The institution’s reputation has been shattered over the past 18 months as fallout from the mismanagement and shoddy governance of a massive $250 million cost-cutting
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