Philanthropist Laurie Cowled is passionate about providing quality education for indigenous students and has a lasting contribution to make.
Creating Futures: A Lasting Impact
While UTS has fostered Indigenous opportunities and learning spaces such as the Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning, Laurie has been supporting the education of a number of indigenous UTS students for several years via an endowment matched by the university. Laurie’s passion for providing better futures for students continues, however, and now Laurie is ensuring Indigenous UTS students will continue to receive her support beyond her own lifetime.
Two percent of the population gets a pretty rough deal and I'd to like to help to equal that out.
Laurie has included in her legal will a bequest that builds on the endowment to educate at least one indigenous female UTS student per year, every year, in perpetuity. Her vision is “to help in the long-term improvement of the lives of the First Australians”.
“Two percent of the population gets a pretty rough deal and I'd to like to help to equal that out,” she says. “I think that educating young women is the way to go.”
Laurie’s personal interest and research into Indigenous education has convinced her that women, as the primary influencers of children, provide the strongest pathways to spreading the impact of education to the next generation.
The choice to partner with UTS came after a friend told her “how well UTS looks after Indigenous students”. Laurie says “she convinced me that UTS is the place that I should try and achieve my aims.”
For Laurie, supporting disadvantaged students is a joyful, rewarding experience which has so far paid off. “A number of my students have achieved quite a lot thanks to their education at (UTS).”
She chuckles when she hears herself refer to them as “my students” explaining that she always feels “a bit motherly towards them”.
Laurie’s commitment has provided support for female students seeking education in business, science and the arts – the latter in honour of Laurie’s late sister. A country girl from Cootamundra, Laurie has also helped to establish a foundation there that provides financial support to regional and rural students who wish to pursue tertiary education.
She enjoys the connections she has made with students. “They help me to feel very much part of the younger part of Australia. Here I am getting quite on in years and yet I have a connection with the younger people. And I feel that's very worthwhile,” she says.
The joy of this work is sprinkled with the occasional exquisite surprise, such as the time one of her PhD students painted a portrait of Laurie and submitted it to the Archibald Prize competition. “I don't suppose it'll get hung, but anyway…”
Impressed with how UTS has applied her vision and investment, Laurie reminds others who might be considering leaving a legacy gift that “this remarkable institution needs much support to enable it to continue its innovative work with all students”.
Laurie’s bequest to UTS as part of the Creating Futures Society will continue to enable and inspire indigenous women to further their education.
“It makes my work there more definite and more lasting.”
further information
For further information, please contact the Advancement Team via email or on +61 2 9514 9861.