Katherine Warwick has been forced to live frugally to complete her PhD.Credit:James Brickwood
A new report from Universities Australia,the peak lobby group for the tertiary sector,calls for an increase in how much PhD students are paid,amid data showing fewer Australian students are choosing to pursue a doctoral research degree.
Warwick believes the five-year marathon of learning how to pay for a place to sleep,food and utilities with just $87 a day – and its resulting physical and mental health impacts – partially explains the decline.
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She will soon hand in her dissertation,on the impact of chemical pollution on platypuses,but said the current crop of undergraduates were deterred from embarking on a PhD in such an expensive city.
“One of the biggest things they say to me towards the end of the great degree is:‘I just want to start working’ … because they all need money,” Warwick said.
According to Universities Australia’s report,domestic student PhD enrolments fell from 43,174 to 39,801 between 2018 and 2023,– a decline of 8 per cent,despite the population growing by 7 per cent over the same period.
“A strong job market,inadequate financial support and insecure employment prospects in academia have deterred many domestic candidates from pursuing PhDs,” it said.