Uncovering the Unaccredited Degrees Scandal
In late 2025, a major controversy erupted in Australia's higher education sector when class action lawsuits were filed against two prominent public universities—the University of Newcastle and Western Sydney University—for allegedly misleading students into enrolling in unaccredited courses in medical engineering and advanced imaging. These cases highlight a disturbing gap between institutional course approvals and the professional accreditations required for graduates to practice in fields like health and engineering. Students, many burdened with tens of thousands in Higher Education Contribution Scheme (HECS) debts, discovered post-graduation that their qualifications did not meet industry standards, derailing careers and sparking widespread outrage.
The scandal underscores broader concerns about transparency in university marketing and the complexities of accreditation in Australia. While the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency (TEQSA, Australia's national regulator for higher education) oversees provider registration and course accreditation at an institutional level, professional bodies such as Engineers Australia and the Australian Society of Medical Imaging and Radiation Therapy (ASMIRT) handle field-specific recognition essential for registration and employment. This dual system has left some graduates in limbo, prompting calls for reform.
Background on Australia's Dual Accreditation System
Australian universities, as self-accrediting authorities under TEQSA, can approve their own courses provided they meet the Higher Education Standards Framework. However, for regulated professions like engineering and health sciences, graduates typically need additional endorsement from bodies like Engineers Australia, which ensures programs align with the Washington Accord for global recognition, or ASMIRT for medical radiation practice. The process involves rigorous evaluations of curriculum, facilities, and outcomes.
Problems arise when universities launch innovative programs without securing provisional accreditation upfront. Prospective students, relying on promotional materials, often assume full accreditation. TEQSA's role is compliance-focused rather than proactive professional vetting, leading to situations where courses are 'TEQSA-approved' but not professionally recognized.
This structure aims to foster innovation but risks student harm if communication fails. Recent government reviews, including the Australian Universities Accord, have flagged systemic risks, with TEQSA gaining new tools for monitoring by 2026.
The University of Newcastle Medical Engineering Case
The Bachelor of Engineering (Medical Honours) at the University of Newcastle, launched for 2018 and 2019 intakes, forms the core of one class action. Over 100 students enrolled, enticed by marketing portraying the degree as a pathway to biomedical engineering roles without extra study. However, the course lacked Engineers Australia accreditation until provisional status was granted in December 2023, backdated to 2020—too late for earlier cohorts.
Lead plaintiff Andreas Sklavos filed in February 2025 in NSW Supreme Court, alleging misleading conduct under Australian Consumer Law. Students claim website and brochures implied full accreditation, leading to extra study costs, lost wages, and emotional distress. The university defends by noting 'seeking accreditation' disclaimers from 2018 and argues professional endorsement isn't mandatory for practice, though it limits opportunities like chartered status or international mobility.
Proceedings were referred for mediation in August 2025, with the university denying liability.
Western Sydney University's Advanced Imaging Controversy
Parallel to Newcastle, Western Sydney University (WSU) faces suit over its Master of Advanced Imaging (MRI), aimed at MRI technologists seeking specialization. Graduate Othniel Antwi discovered post-completion that the course wasn't accredited by ASMIRT, blocking registration with the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA).
Class action claims filed in mid-2025 allege deceptive promotion, with students accruing $55,000 HECS debts for a 'non-existent' career path. WSU has not commented publicly, but the case parallels Newcastle's, emphasizing marketing failures. ASMIRT certification is crucial for advanced practice, involving clinical competencies and supervised experience not fully met here.
Student Impacts: Debts, Distress, and Derailment
Affected graduates face profound consequences. Vera Lawless (Newcastle) couldn't deploy to California for work, citing a 'black cloud' over her passion. Sklavos added a year of study at extra cost, while Antwi described 'life-shattering' helplessness. Common issues include:
- Inability to gain professional registration or indemnity insurance.
- Career caps, e.g., no supervision roles or overseas work.
- HECS debts of $45,000-$55,000 with no ROI.
- Mental health toll: anxiety, depression from dashed dreams.
Solicitor Peter Fagan notes severe psychological injury, with some students 'never the same.' For international students, visa pathways are blocked, exacerbating financial strain.
Explore career advice for health and engineering roles to pivot effectively.University Defences and Responses
Newcastle asserts disclaimers were present and accreditation non-essential for basic practice, planning court defence. WSU is investigating amid silence. Both highlight self-accreditation allowing innovation, but critics argue ethical marketing lapses.
Prior case: James Cook University settled 2023 with 27 students over unaccredited commerce major, signaling pattern.
TEQSA's Role and Calls for Reform
TEQSA enforces standards but relies on universities for professional alignment. No direct sanctions yet, but 2025 reviews recommend better monitoring. The National Student Ombudsman (2025) aids complaints. Experts urge mandatory professional accreditation disclosures.
TEQSA's National Register lets students verify providers.
Broader Implications for Australian Higher Education
This scandal erodes trust amid enrollment surges (record 2026 uni starts). Universities risk litigation, reputational damage; students demand refunds, compensation. Sector-wide, it spotlights innovation vs. assurance balance.
In NSW, home to both unis, check NSW higher ed jobs for verified opportunities.
Previous Scandals and Patterns
JCU's 2023 settlement mirrors current cases; VET sector saw 30,000 lose quals in 2025 crackdowns, though university-focused here. Patterns: new programs rushed without accreditation.
Legal Outlook and Student Actions
NSW Supreme Court cases ongoing; mediation possible. Students urged to register via lawyers (e.g., Australian Law Partners). If affected, review Rate My Professor for insights.
Protecting Yourself: Tips for Prospective Students
- Verify TEQSA registration and professional body status.
- Scrutinize marketing vs. fine print.
- Contact bodies like Engineers Australia pre-enrollment.
Explore higher ed jobs and career advice for secure paths.
Photo by Eriksson Luo on Unsplash
Future Reforms and Sector Outlook
2026 TEQSA enhancements, Accord implementations promise transparency. Positive: boosts accountability, protects students. For unis, clearer guidelines; for grads, pathways like bridging courses.
Stakeholders eye constructive solutions amid litigation.
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