Skip to main content

Site navigation

  • University of Technology Sydney home
  • Home

    Home
  • For students

  • For industry

  • Research

Explore

  • Courses
  • Events
  • News
  • Stories
  • People

For you

  • Libraryarrow_right_alt
  • Staffarrow_right_alt
  • Alumniarrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt
  • Study at UTS

    • arrow_right_alt Find a course
    • arrow_right_alt Course areas
    • arrow_right_alt Undergraduate students
    • arrow_right_alt Postgraduate students
    • arrow_right_alt Research Masters and PhD
    • arrow_right_alt Online study and short courses
  • Student information

    • arrow_right_alt Current students
    • arrow_right_alt New UTS students
    • arrow_right_alt Graduates (Alumni)
    • arrow_right_alt High school students
    • arrow_right_alt Indigenous students
    • arrow_right_alt International students
  • Admissions

    • arrow_right_alt How to apply
    • arrow_right_alt Entry pathways
    • arrow_right_alt Eligibility
arrow_right_altVisit our hub for students

For you

  • Libraryarrow_right_alt
  • Staffarrow_right_alt
  • Alumniarrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt

POPULAR LINKS

  • Apply for a coursearrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt
  • Scholarshipsarrow_right_alt
  • Featured industries

    • arrow_right_alt Agriculture and food
    • arrow_right_alt Defence and space
    • arrow_right_alt Energy and transport
    • arrow_right_alt Government and policy
    • arrow_right_alt Health and medical
    • arrow_right_alt Corporate training
  • Explore

    • arrow_right_alt Tech Central
    • arrow_right_alt Case studies
    • arrow_right_alt Research
arrow_right_altVisit our hub for industry

For you

  • Libraryarrow_right_alt
  • Staffarrow_right_alt
  • Alumniarrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt

POPULAR LINKS

  • Find a UTS expertarrow_right_alt
  • Partner with usarrow_right_alt
  • Explore

    • arrow_right_alt Explore our research
    • arrow_right_alt Research centres and institutes
    • arrow_right_alt Graduate research
    • arrow_right_alt Research partnerships
arrow_right_altVisit our hub for research

For you

  • Libraryarrow_right_alt
  • Staffarrow_right_alt
  • Alumniarrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt

POPULAR LINKS

  • Find a UTS expertarrow_right_alt
  • Research centres and institutesarrow_right_alt
  • University of Technology Sydney home
Explore the University of Technology Sydney
Category Filters:
University of Technology Sydney home University of Technology Sydney home
  1. home
  2. arrow_forward_ios ... For students
  3. arrow_forward_ios ... Current students
  4. arrow_forward_ios ... Managing your course
  5. arrow_forward_ios ... Graduation
  6. arrow_forward_ios ... Speakers and speeches
  7. arrow_forward_ios 2016
  8. arrow_forward_ios Louise McElvogue

Louise McElvogue

explore
  • Speakers and speeches
    • 2009 and older
      • arrow_forward Associate Professor Jeremy Edmiston
      • arrow_forward Bill Edge
      • arrow_forward Diane Jones
      • arrow_forward Dr Dawn Casey
      • arrow_forward Dr Lynn Gribble
      • arrow_forward Dr Rebecca Huntley
      • arrow_forward Emeritus Professor J Robin Warren
      • arrow_forward Emeritus Professor Judith M Parker
      • arrow_forward Glen Boreham
      • arrow_forward The Hon. Bruce Baird
      • arrow_forward John Brogden
      • arrow_forward Marco Belgiorno-Zegna, AM
      • arrow_forward Mark Scott
      • arrow_forward Michael Kirby
      • arrow_forward Michael Myers
      • arrow_forward Penelope Seidler, AM
      • arrow_forward Professor David S G Goodman
      • arrow_forward Stephen Loosley
      • arrow_forward Steve Vamos
      • arrow_forward Tim Besley
    • arrow_forward 2010
    • arrow_forward 2011
    • 2012
      • arrow_forward Mr Guy Templeton
      • arrow_forward Mr Thomas Keneally, AO
    • 2013
      • arrow_forward Dr Cathy Foley
      • arrow_forward Dr Chris Roberts
      • arrow_forward Dr Jeffrey Crass
      • arrow_forward Dr Kerry O'Brien
      • arrow_forward Dr Michael Myers, OAM
      • arrow_forward Hon. Helen Sham-Ho OAM
      • arrow_forward The Hon James Spigelman, AC, QC
      • arrow_forward The Hon Patricia Forsythe
      • arrow_forward Mr Brett Clegg
      • arrow_forward Mr Chris Johnson, AM
      • arrow_forward Mr Clary Castrission
      • arrow_forward Mr David Beslich
      • arrow_forward Mr Geoff Lloyd
      • arrow_forward Mr Geoff Wilson
      • arrow_forward Mr Mark Willson
      • arrow_forward Mr Peter Bradd
      • arrow_forward Mr Richard Alcock
      • arrow_forward Mr Thomas Michael Keneally, AO
      • arrow_forward Mrs Annalie Killian
      • arrow_forward Ms Amy Wilkins
      • arrow_forward Ms Hannah Tribe
      • arrow_forward Ms Lila Mularczyk
      • arrow_forward Ms Maile Carnegie
      • arrow_forward Ms Maria Atkinson, AM
      • arrow_forward Ms Maureen Thurston
      • arrow_forward Prof Rosalind Croucher
      • arrow_forward Prof S.P Kothari
      • arrow_forward Professor Brian David Outram Anderson AO, Order of the Rising Sun, Japan
      • arrow_forward Professor David Currow
      • arrow_forward Professor Graeme Milbourne Clark, AC
      • arrow_forward Rev Timothy Costello
      • arrow_forward Senator Sekai Masikana Holland
    • 2014
      • arrow_forward Dr Alex Byrne
      • arrow_forward Dr Anna Clark
      • arrow_forward Dr Chau Chak Wing
      • arrow_forward Dr Lisa O’Brien
      • arrow_forward Dr Richard Sharp
      • arrow_forward Dr William James Peacock
      • arrow_forward The Honourable John Watkins
      • arrow_forward Mr Chris Gabriel
      • arrow_forward Mr Ian Maxted
      • arrow_forward Mr Jack Curtis
      • arrow_forward Mr Mark Maloney
      • arrow_forward Mr Neil Chatfield
      • arrow_forward Mr Patrick McIntyre
      • arrow_forward Mr Peter Ivany AM
      • arrow_forward Mr Peter Longman
      • arrow_forward Mr Roland Slee
      • arrow_forward Mr Tony Sukkar
      • arrow_forward Mr William Cox
      • arrow_forward Mrs Alison Page
      • arrow_forward Ms Alexandra Rose
      • arrow_forward Ms Alison Peters
      • arrow_forward Ms Bernie Hobbs
      • arrow_forward Ms Camilla Block
      • arrow_forward Ms Catherine Livingstone AO
      • arrow_forward Ms Lily Serna
      • arrow_forward Ms Margaret Cunneen SC
      • arrow_forward Ms Rachel Healy
      • arrow_forward Ms Sam Mostyn
      • arrow_forward Ms Wendy Bryant
      • arrow_forward Professor Clifford Hughes AO
      • arrow_forward Professor Debra Jackson
      • arrow_forward Professor Jane Sandall
      • arrow_forward Professor Terry Campbell AM
    • 2015
      • arrow_forward Dr John Best
      • arrow_forward Dr Paul McGillick
      • arrow_forward Dr Rosemary Bryant AO
      • arrow_forward Dr Simon Walsh PSM
      • arrow_forward Dr Terrence Stevenson
      • arrow_forward Emeritus Professor Ross Milbourne AO
      • arrow_forward The Honourable Dame Quentin Bryce AD CVO
      • arrow_forward Miss Penny Winn
      • arrow_forward Mr Andrew Penfold AM
      • arrow_forward Mr Chris Zaharia
      • arrow_forward Mr Justin Greiner
      • arrow_forward Mr Martin Hill
      • arrow_forward Mr Paul Freeman
      • arrow_forward Mr Richard Tamba
      • arrow_forward Mr Richard White
      • arrow_forward Mr Stephen Page
      • arrow_forward Mr Tony Frencham
      • arrow_forward Ms Elizabeth Ann Macgregor OBE
      • arrow_forward Ms Elizabeth Foley
      • arrow_forward Ms Elizabeth Koff
      • arrow_forward Ms Jacqueline Feeney
      • arrow_forward Ms Katherine Burleigh
      • arrow_forward Ms Leona McGrath
      • arrow_forward Ms Pauline Vamos
      • arrow_forward Ms Rose Hiscock
      • arrow_forward Ms Rosemary Blight
      • arrow_forward Professor The Honourable Dame Marie Bashir AD CVO
      • arrow_forward Professor Sam Bucolo
      • arrow_forward Professor Shankar Sankaran
      • arrow_forward Professor Vlado Perkovic
    • 2016
      • arrow_forward Adrian Turner
      • arrow_forward Alicia Maynard
      • arrow_forward Andrew Mead
      • arrow_forward Anntonette Dailey
      • arrow_forward Anthony Burke
      • arrow_forward Bettina McMahon
      • arrow_forward Bruce Ferguson
      • arrow_forward Carla Zampatti AC
      • arrow_forward Charles Rice
      • arrow_forward Chris Bulmer
      • arrow_forward Chris Drane
      • arrow_forward Craig Laslett
      • arrow_forward David Curran
      • arrow_forward Debra Thoms
      • arrow_forward Edwina McCann
      • arrow_forward Elizabeth Sullivan
      • arrow_forward Gene Sherman
      • arrow_forward Jane Needham
      • arrow_forward Jenny Edwards
      • arrow_forward John Goh
      • arrow_forward Kate Wilson
      • arrow_forward Kim Jacobs AM
      • arrow_forward Lacey Johnson
      • arrow_forward Laurence Coy
      • arrow_forward Louise McElvogue
      • arrow_forward Mark Fladrich
      • arrow_forward Meera Agar
      • arrow_forward Neil Balnaves
      • arrow_forward Peter Freedman
      • arrow_forward Peter Kazacos
      • arrow_forward Peter Steinberg
      • arrow_forward Sacha Coles
      • arrow_forward Sharon Cook
      • arrow_forward Stephanie Fahey
    • 2017
      • arrow_forward Bill Gladstone
      • arrow_forward Brian Wilson AO
      • arrow_forward Craig Lambert
      • arrow_forward Craig Roy
      • arrow_forward Damon Rees
      • arrow_forward Frances Hughes ONZM
      • arrow_forward Gene Sherman AM
      • arrow_forward George Koukis
      • arrow_forward Glen Boreham AM
      • arrow_forward Hilda Clune
      • arrow_forward Ian Oppermann
      • arrow_forward Ian Watt AC
      • arrow_forward Jacqui Cross
      • arrow_forward Jenny Brockie
      • arrow_forward Joanna Knott OAM
      • arrow_forward John McGuire
      • arrow_forward Katherine Woodthorpe
      • arrow_forward Kim Crestani
      • arrow_forward Lionel King
      • arrow_forward Luca Belgiorno-Nettis AM
      • arrow_forward Mark Scott AO
      • arrow_forward Matthew Favier
      • arrow_forward Michael Sexton SC
      • arrow_forward Narelle Kennedy AM
      • arrow_forward Peter Bailey
      • arrow_forward Peter Booth
      • arrow_forward Peter Bradd
      • arrow_forward Richard White
      • arrow_forward Rob Lynch
      • arrow_forward Sally Redman AO
      • arrow_forward Sean Gordon
      • arrow_forward Steve Vamos
      • arrow_forward Susannah Eliott
      • arrow_forward Tim Soutphommasane
      • arrow_forward Wendy Machin
      • arrow_forward William Smart
    • 2018
      • arrow_forward Adjunct Professor Kylie Ward
      • arrow_forward Adrian Appo OAM
      • arrow_forward Aidan Sarsfield
      • arrow_forward Ana Maria Escobar
      • arrow_forward Associate Professor Beth Kotze
      • arrow_forward Brian Zulaikha
      • arrow_forward Caro Meldrum-Hanna
      • arrow_forward Caroline Rockett
      • arrow_forward Catherine Breen Kamkong
      • arrow_forward Craig Roy
      • arrow_forward Cristina Cifuentes
      • arrow_forward Danny Lester
      • arrow_forward David Thodey AO
      • arrow_forward Dean McEvoy
      • arrow_forward Dianne Hill
      • arrow_forward Dr Alex Zelinsky AO
      • arrow_forward Dr Christobel Ferguson
      • arrow_forward Dr Edward Humphries
      • arrow_forward Dr Ray Owen
      • arrow_forward Dr Tony Smithyman
      • arrow_forward Emeritus Professor Vicki Sara AO
      • arrow_forward Frank Howarth PSM
      • arrow_forward Garry Browne AM
      • arrow_forward George Savvides
      • arrow_forward Hamish Cameron OAM
      • arrow_forward The Hon Justice Ann Ainslie-Wallace
      • arrow_forward Jennifer Westacott
      • arrow_forward Jon Hutchison AM
      • arrow_forward Julian Doyle
      • arrow_forward Kerrie Mather
      • arrow_forward Kim McKay A.O.
      • arrow_forward Laura Berry
      • arrow_forward Max York
      • arrow_forward Om Dhungel
      • arrow_forward Paul Thorley
      • arrow_forward Professor David Currow
      • arrow_forward Professor Peter Ralph
      • arrow_forward Professor Robert Gordon Whittaker AM FRSN FAIB
      • arrow_forward Rob Castaneda
      • arrow_forward Scott Olsen
      • arrow_forward Stan Grant
      • arrow_forward Zareh Nalbandian
    • 2019
      • arrow_forward Ajay Bhatia
      • arrow_forward Andrea Myles
      • arrow_forward Andrew Simpson
      • arrow_forward Associate Professor Eric Chow
      • arrow_forward Brad Chan
      • arrow_forward Brooke Boney
      • arrow_forward Claire Madden
      • arrow_forward Denise Lofts
      • arrow_forward Dr Andrew Mears
      • arrow_forward Dr Larry Marshall
      • arrow_forward Dr Paul Scully-Power AM
      • arrow_forward Dr Ponndara Ith
      • arrow_forward Dr Sarah Hill
      • arrow_forward Drenka Andjelic
      • arrow_forward Edward Santow
      • arrow_forward Elaine Henry OAM
      • arrow_forward Emeritus Professor John Daly
      • arrow_forward Hoang Dao
      • arrow_forward Joel Willey
      • arrow_forward John Quinn
      • arrow_forward Jost Stollmann
      • arrow_forward Kelly Ferguson
      • arrow_forward Kristal Kinsela-Christie
      • arrow_forward Kylie Walker
      • arrow_forward Laurie Cowled
      • arrow_forward Louise Vlatko
      • arrow_forward Lyn Lewis-Smith
      • arrow_forward Melonie Bayl-Smith
      • arrow_forward Mia Garlick
      • arrow_forward Peter Bailey
      • arrow_forward Professor Hugh Durrant-Whyte
      • arrow_forward Professor Jane Sandall CBE
      • arrow_forward Professor Sandy Middleton
      • arrow_forward Rachel Grimes
      • arrow_forward Richard Potok
      • arrow_forward Robert Kelly
      • arrow_forward Roland Slee
      • arrow_forward Sarah Gibson
      • arrow_forward Steven Worrall
      • arrow_forward Susan Bannigan
      • arrow_forward Tanya Hosch
      • arrow_forward Tim Reed
      • arrow_forward Todd Greenberg
      • arrow_forward Topaz Conway
      • arrow_forward Violet Roumeliotis
      • arrow_forward Warwick Plunkett AM

CEO, MacLeod Media

Ceremony: 20 April 2016, 5.30pm

Speech

Chancellor, Brian Wilson

Vice Chancellor, Professor Atilla Brungs

Associate Dean Maryanne Dever

Faculty members and University Staff

Proud parents, families and supporters

Graduands.

I would like to acknowledge the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, upon whose ancestral lands we meet today. I honour the learning that has taken place on this site for thousands of years and their elders past and present.

To the graduands in the room….

This is your day. Heartfelt Congratulations.

It is no small feat to figure out what you want to study, get into a degree,

and then figure out how you will fund yourself through it.

However. To actually stick with it and graduate is something else entirely and you should be very proud of that achievement.

To your families and friends who helped you through financially, with emotional and moral support, well done. You in the supporter’s crew deserve special acknowledgement.

It really is an honour for me to speak to you today

Only when I started to write this speech did I realise that it is exactly 30 years since I graduated from UTS Communications, not sure I can really be that OLD.  

After living outside the country for almost 20 of those 30 years I am particularly happy to have reconnected with UTS.

I chair the industry advisory board for the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, so I know you have an exceptional Dean and Academic Staff who are keeping at the forefront of industry changes, in what must be the most be disrupted subject area taught at UTS.  At least the most disrupted so far.

 Today you leave with a degree from the Number One Young University in Australia and join an impressive band of UTS alumni who Think, Change and Do around the globe. 

Change is the key here and how you deal with change will be the most important aspect of your career- I will come back to change in a moment.

Today you leave with a raft of information from your degree along with having mastered one of life’s most vital skills- communications.   As American journalist Sydney Harris explained….   information and communications are used interchangeably though they are actually very different

“Information is giving out; communication is getting through.”

No matter what stream you are graduating from today--- that ability to get through, to connect and engage is the most important skill I have seen in any colleague or leader and a very powerful tool.  You need to think carefully about how you use that power to connect and use it wisely.

My degree has taken me to unexpected places I want to share three things I have learnt that might be useful to you

  • You have to get comfortable being uncomfortable.
  • You have to push doors to open them
  • Change is good  

Firstly --get comfortable being uncomfortable. As I thought back on my journey from sitting in this hall three decades ago, I realised it really has been a very zigzag path. And while each of you will take very different paths, I think the most useful lessons you can learn are those that come from the twists and turns.

One of the certainties is nothing will turn out how you imagine it will, least of all you.  

I can promise it will be an amazing ride wherever you end up. But it will be messy and complicated. And that will be OK. How you react to the twists and turns is what makes the difference.

Let me explain with some lessons on getting uncomfortable from my journey

First lesson in getting uncomfortable.

Don’t let anyone's ideas about you and most of all your own ideas about you hold you back.

 When I graduated from UTS, I wanted to break the next Watergate

I had a great HSC mark, a good degree and a stack of experience working as a journalist, but I couldn’t crack the ABC, Fairfax or News cadet programmes. Missing out on a cadetship was a huge disappointment for me. The only person I know who got a traineeship got half my HSC mark, had no degree and their parents knew someone.

Instead I took a journalist job on a film and TV trade paper run by some ex-Fairfax journalists, who turned out to be great editors and fantastic teachers.  I worked my way up to a senior role in a couple of years when my boss asked me to edit an annual directory that listed everything in the film and TV business from lawyers to hairdressers to camera operators.

It was a horror, thousands of listings on yellow post it notes, no computers and every listing had to be checked by phone. This looked like a backwards step, taking me away from my journalism goals and I said no. My boss countered with offer to send me to the Cannes Film Festival if I took the job.

Mmmm… I was 23 and had never left Australia. So I took the grunt job editing the directory.

After six months of hell and yellow post it notes stuck to my feet and elbows, I was in France having cocktails with Meryl Streep.

I didn’t let my idea of myself breaking Watergate hold me back.  I took a risk and felt uncomfortable. On the same trip I spent some time in London, applied for a job I saw in the paper and when I returned to Sydney found out I got it.

Second uncomfortable lesson from this story. The best jobs you take are those you think you can’t do. As someone who had only spent 6 weeks outside Australia, the job as the international editor of a European media title was certainly a stretch. But I took a risk packed up my life and moved. In the first week I arrived the staff went on strike as a vote of no confidence in the editor who hired me. Now that really was uncomfortable, I thought it was all over before it began.

But I hung in there and within two years I won a journalism award for my work on the auction of commercial TV licenses, which involved an encyclopedic knowledge of British geography, TV regulation and talking to a lot of very posh POMs who struggled to understand my accent.

The final lesson from this career story is that you don't know where things will lead.  While I missed out on the cadetships for the best journalism jobs in Australia, my career has taken me around the world and I worked for the New York Times, CNN and the BBC. In the past five years, things have come full circle.  I have consulted for the head of news at the ABC, and Editors at Fairfax, The Guardian and News Limited helping them transition to digital. Many of the journalists who probably got those roles I longed for out of university, ask me for advice about how they can get more digital.

Which brings me to Lesson number 2.

Doors don't open unless you push and the way you push will make the difference. This is a tricky one and it took me years to figure it out. Working in media I had the confidence to doorstop anyone for a story, from Rupert Murdoch to Princes and Princesses. However it took me a long time to realise that I needed to use the same confidence in asking for help in my career.

You need to find a mentor, ask for advice and introductions. This is not just when you are starting out, it is something that you need throughout your career.

Now I am building a board portfolio and I have to ask all sorts of powerful people for help.  My advice: target the person you think can help you and write to them- the worst that can happen is they say no, but you will be surprised how many people want to help you.

The caveat is that people want to help if you ask in the right way.  

Be genuine, have humility, be crystal clear about what you are asking for and be willing to put in the work.

The most important thing to remember is to pass it on. Be willing to help those around you. Open the door to them and don't wait for them to push.  I promise it will feel good.

My final piece of advice is to embrace Change.

You are graduating into an industry that is in the midst of massive disruption. Journalism particularly is in a maelstrom and the changes in film, TV and all fields of communication will continue shifting.   

While the job titles are changing and the business models are shifting the fundamental need to tell stories, to speak truth to power and put your head above the parapet is needed more than ever.

Communications is different. The Panama Papers may have been released by hackers and not a Deepthroat, but the journalism involved is as complicated as anything Woodward and Bernstein did when they were told to “ follow the money”. Today we are working with the incredible power of technology that allows us to compare tranches of complex, global information much more easily.

I work in digital and technology and I can tell you the only certainty is that the pace of change is increasing. The next five years are going to be awesome- artificial intelligence, machine learning and virtual reality are just some of the developments changing your world.

More important than the technology is your attitude. You need to be willing to change, not just in your first job or your first decade, but continuously throughout your career. 

So I leave you with this final piece of advice.

Teach yourself new skills, take the job that sounds a bit dull but might offer you an edge, devour information about your subject area, do something you think you can’t do. The best way to keep growing is to continue to ask questions, continue to Think, Change and Do.

Thank you again for this opportunity to speak tonight.  I salute your achievement and wish you courage for the road ahead. Enjoy celebrating your degree and use you communication skills wisely. 

About the Speaker

Louise McElvogue is the CEO of Macleod Media, a new global media consulting service.                      

Louise founded Macleod Media in 2004 and now works with clients such as Fairfax Media, The Guardian, News Corp, the ABC and the BBC.

She started her career as a journalist in Australia. She later moved to the United States where she worked as a producer, consultant, and editor for  CNN, The Los Angeles Times, and The New York Times.

In 2011 Louise was appointed to the Federal Government’s Convergence Review, which examined the regulation of technology and media for the Minister of Communications.

Louise is a Trustee of Sydney Living Museums, a UTS Business School advisory board member, and Chairs the UTS Faculty of Social Sciences Advisory Board.

Louise holds a Bachelor of Arts in Communication from UTS, a Masters with Distinction from Goldsmiths University of London, and is a graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors.

Acknowledgement of Country

UTS acknowledges the Gadigal People of the Eora Nation and the Boorooberongal People of the Dharug Nation upon whose ancestral lands our campuses now stand. We would also like to pay respect to the Elders both past and present, acknowledging them as the traditional custodians of knowledge for these lands. 

University of Technology Sydney

City Campus

15 Broadway, Ultimo, NSW 2007

Get in touch with UTS

Follow us

  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • Facebook

A member of

  • Australian Technology Network
Use arrow keys to navigate within each column of links. Press Tab to move between columns.

Study

  • Find a course
  • Undergraduate
  • Postgraduate
  • How to apply
  • Scholarships and prizes
  • International students
  • Campus maps
  • Accommodation

Engage

  • Find an expert
  • Industry
  • News
  • Events
  • Experience UTS
  • Research
  • Stories
  • Alumni

About

  • Who we are
  • Faculties
  • Learning and teaching
  • Sustainability
  • Initiatives
  • Equity, diversity and inclusion
  • Campus and locations
  • Awards and rankings
  • UTS governance

Staff and students

  • Current students
  • Help and support
  • Library
  • Policies
  • StaffConnect
  • Working at UTS
  • UTS Handbook
  • Contact us
  • Copyright © 2025
  • ABN: 77 257 686 961
  • CRICOS provider number: 00099F
  • TEQSA provider number: PRV12060
  • TEQSA category: Australian University
  • Privacy
  • Copyright
  • Disclaimer
  • Accessibility