Abstract

Abstract Increasing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander participation in higher education can play a critical role in transforming lives and is the trajectory to closing the gap and reducing disadvantage. Despite recent progress, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples remain significantly under-represented in higher education. Poor retention and high attrition rates of these students come at significant financial cost for the individual, community, university and government. Wirltu Yarlu, the Indigenous Education Unit at the University of Adelaide has reviewed the role student support services play in improving retention and completion rates, with an aim to improve Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander student retention and completion. The newly developed Student Success Strategy is an innovative approach to student support that aims to identify and respond to individual student needs in a more effective and efficient manner. The model encompasses a self-assessment tool designed to measure progress across several domains. Self-assessments are used to inform student specific support needs which in turn enable support staff to personalise future interventions for each student and respond accordingly in an attempt to reduce and prevent student attrition.

Highlights

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples continue to be subjected to disadvantage relative to other Australians across a broad range of social, health and educational indicators (Cunningham and Paradies, 2012)

  • With an increasing number of studies related to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students in higher education (Oliver et al, 2013), it is well established that increasing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander participation in higher education has the potential to play a critical role in reducing disadvantage (Pechenkina et al, 2011)

  • The initiatives implemented across Australian universities in recent years have resulted in an increase in the number of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students accessing university

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Summary

Introduction

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples continue to be subjected to disadvantage relative to other Australians across a broad range of social, health and educational indicators (Cunningham and Paradies, 2012). With an increasing number of studies related to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students in higher education (Oliver et al, 2013), it is well established that increasing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander participation in higher education has the potential to play a critical role in reducing disadvantage (Pechenkina et al, 2011). Reducing the disadvantage between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students and their non-Aboriginal counterparts is recognised as an overdue and urgent national priority (Nakata et al, 2017). Despite this understanding, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander education remains in a parlous state, predominately characterised by stagnant or slow improvement (Gray and Beresford, 2008)

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