
UNSW Sydney to adopt new academic calendar in global approach
New Delhi, Sept 24 (IBNS): As part of its continuing reforms to suit evolving educational needs, UNSW Sydney, one of Australias leading research and teaching universities, is switching the dates of its Academic Calendar from 2019 to a February-December one like the US quarter-calendar in use by top universities like Stanford and UCLA.
According to the new calendar, UNSW would have three 10-week teaching terms, and an optional five-week summer term, in a year.
“As part of a progressive and innovative 2025 strategy, UNSW is moving to a new academic calendar model from February 2019,” the varsity, ranked 45 in the QS global rankings, announced.
The new calendar is aimed to give students more flexibility, allow them to spread their study load over more of the year. Studying fewer courses per term will enable deeper learning, spreading the teaching across the year will reduce pressure on classrooms and laboratories and create a more vibrant main campus.
The change in calendar is in accordance with what UNSW President and Vice-Chancellor Ian Jacobs has said: “Universities need to evolve and one of the challenges is the changing work environment and the need for people to have lifelong education… we’re already thinking about short courses that fit with what industry wants.”
The alignment with the Northern Hemisphere university calendars will help create more global opportunities for students and reduce pressure on them. Students will study three rather than four courses each term.
The 2019 edition of the QS World University Rankings: Graduate Employability, that reviewed 500 universities, has placed UNSW 28th in the world for graduate employability.
UNSW has been attracting a growing number of bright Indian students for Undergraduate and Post Graduate studies in Business, Commerce, IT, Engineering, Design & Architecture.
According to Mr Matt Henderson, Head of Partnerships: Asia at the Division of External Relations UNSW, “UNSW’s new academic calendar will give students the flexibility to spread their study load over the year, allowing them to take up more work integrated learning opportunities and hence continuously evolve to meet market demand and to anticipate future requirements. This is what makes UNSW stand out.”
The new calendar timetable would begin with an Orientation week from February 11-15, 2019. Term One would begin on February 18, while the last day of Term three after the exams would be December 14. UNSW currently has an academic calendar that begins in early March and ends late in November.
In October 2018, UNSW will be moving to annual enrolment, which will allow students to better plan their studies by enrolling in all their courses for the following year.
The varsity will have two Undergraduate admission intakes per year – in Term 1 and Term 3.
From 2019, graduation ceremonies will be held three times a year at the end of each Term.
Top Headlines
-
News
In a setback for Donald Trump, US judge orders federal agencies to rehire fired workers: Report
March 13, 2025
-
News
Tamil Nadu govt's move to replace rupee symbol signals a dangerous mindset: Nirmala Sitharaman
March 13, 2025
-
News
'Nothing more than a temporary breather for Ukraine': Vladimir Putin aide slams ceasefire proposal
March 13, 2025
-
News
Ranya Rao shares how she received consignment at Dubai airport, learnt how to conceal gold bars on YouTube
March 13, 2025
-
News
'People are going to Russia right now as we speak: Donald Trump on Ukraine war ceasefire talks
March 12, 2025
-
News
Pakistani army claims to have freed all hostages in passenger train siege; 28 personnel killed
March 12, 2025
-
News
Europe holds high-level talks on rearming continent, boosting Ukraine aid
March 12, 2025
-
News
180 passengers, mostly soldiers, held hostage as Baloch Liberation Army hijack train in Pakistan
March 12, 2025
-
News
Ukraine agrees to proposal for a 30-day general ceasefire with Russia, US to resume military aid
March 11, 2025
-
News
Mark Carney set to succeed Justin Trudeau as Canada PM
March 10, 2025