
Western Sydney U management backs itself in to improve or admit failure with a five-year statement of measurable objectives.
Vice Chancellor George Williams’ first plan includes “measures of success” for all core operations, including;
Students
- improving share of the western Sydney UG market by 3%, to 30%
- increasing retention from 70% to 83%
- increasing Indigenous UG enrolments from 2.5% to 3.2%
Staff profile
- increasing academics as proportion of staff from 39% to 45%
- keeping workforce costs below 55%
- triple student-placement providers to 100
Research
- nearly doubling applied research income, to $110m
- lifting four-year PHD completions from less than half to 75%
The plan also doubles down on WSU’s branding as in and for its heartland, to “drive the region’s transformation from ‘peripheral” to ‘core’ economy.
It is based on a previous paper circulated for staff input that acknowledged challenges, notably on:
- student satisfaction: “room to do much better”
- retention: “an opportunity to better support students”
- graduate outcomes: “ensure that its graduates are sought-after, find work quickly and are prepared for the workforce.
Full marks for frankness – although there is something missing in the plan – how it will be paid for.