The Morrison government wanted to divert students from arts degrees. The result is all ancient Greek to me
I did end up choosing arts. But what I didn't realise was that the scheme would continue to push me away from studying areas I'm passionate about, through the bizarre cost discrepancies between different arts subjects.
Take my semester 1 subjects: literature and French were each $578. Creative writing and political theory were $2124 each.
I was shocked when I received that first fee statement. My choice of study area would determine whether I paid about $2000 for a single subject or an entire semester. My whole degree could cost anywhere between $14,000 and $50,000. And I couldn't understand the rationale behind these disparities. If, as it professed to do, the scheme's pricing system aimed to incentivise 'vocational' study areas, why were literature graduates considered four times more employable than politics students?
When I investigated further, I found the discrepancies between the cost of arts subjects even more perplexing. 'Indigenous Australian art histories' is twice as expensive as 'Art history: Australian art'. 'Aboriginal writing' is double the price of 'the Australian imaginary'. First Nations voices and history were long overlooked in university settings – why would these subjects be priced more prohibitively?
Whether there's an agenda there or not, the average arts student, in choosing between these two art history or literature subjects, would almost certainly be influenced by the significant price difference. I would be.
Likewise, gender studies sits within the highest price bracket, costing $2124 per subject. Amid a domestic violence epidemic and a rising wave of youth misogyny, students who attempt to understand the nature and history of gender-based discrimination are slapped with a financial penalty. And if the rationale behind this is employability, it's hard to argue that the high fees reflect the supposedly non-vocational nature of this study area, when Latin sits at the opposite end of the fee spectrum.
In fact, any argument that arts subject prices are determined by their vocational value seems void when you compare the prices of psychology and media with ancient Greek.

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