Southern Cross University announces hundreds of scholarships are available for Indigenous students in 2022

Anthony Olive, Team Leader of the Indigenous Australian Student Services (IASS) at Southern Cross University, said the North Coast (Bundjalung Country) based institution is proud of its strong Indigenous cohort, and is continually working to increase Indigenous student participation in higher education through personalised support and decreasing financial barriers.

‘On average our IASS team at Southern Cross University supports more than 400 Indigenous students annually with some form of scholarship,” Mr Olive said.

‘These scholarships are deeply appreciated and very meaningful to our Indigenous student cohort, ranging from textbook bursaries of $150 right up to full time educational and accommodation scholarships of $2,500 and $5,000, and in 2022 these will increase to a top of $8,000 a year over three years, with an increased Indigenous scholarship pool worth more than $1million.

‘These scholarships make up part of the wider scholarship pool worth approximately $3million in 2022.’

Anthony Olive said the IASS team encourages all Indigenous Year 12 students to consider university as an option for further study, education and knowledge. People who have been out of school for a while can also apply for university study.

‘Regardless of someone’s school success we have a number of dedicated pathway options specifically for Indigenous students to enter into study at Southern Cross,” Mr Olive said.

SCU midwifery graduate Denae Nicholls thanked the IASS team for the financial support she received during her placement at Lismore Base Hospital.

‘I am happy to say that I am now finished, my grades have been finalised, and I will be receiving my AHPRA registration within the next couple of weeks to start my job down in Melbourne. 

‘I would not have been able to complete my final placement in becoming a midwife without the scholarship support from IASS and I am very grateful.’

Current Bachelor of Midwifery student Rebecca Thorne is on her final placement and says she received two scholarships – one to attend the prestigious Australian College of Midwives 2021 Conference and the other for a cadetship through NSW Health, which has enabled her to work at the Tweed Hospital for an additional 12 weeks on top of her university placements.

Rebecca is a proud Kunja woman living on Bundjalung country. She says it was following the birth of her own babies that she quit her 14-year career in fashion and enrolled in the Preparing for Success Program (PSP) at Southern Cross as a pathway to her dream of becoming a midwife.

‘When I was in school I was told I wouldn’t be smart enough to study at University, but now that I’m here the journey to achieving my midwifery degree has been incredible with Southern Cross Uni supporting me every step of the way,” Rebecca said.

‘The scholarship and cadetship have been really amazing in helping me increase my clinical skills and professional networks and just solidifies why I want to be a midwife, delivering culturally-safe woman-centred care, and supporting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women within my community to feel empowered and know the power they have within themselves.

‘There are Indigenous midwifery students who went before me, such as scholarship recipient Taneeka Thomas, who after graduating in 2018 went on to work in NSW Health and is doing amazing things now with the Midwifery Group Practice (MGP) program at Gold Coast University Hospital to improve health outcomes for Indigenous women.’

Indigenous scholarships on offer include the ANZ Indigenous Student Scholarship worth $5,000 a year over three years of full-time study, the Feros Care Nursing Scholarship worth $5,000, and a Scholarship from the City of Lismore worth $5,000 for a local Indigenous resident from the Lismore region.

To find out more visit scu.edu.au/scholarships or for application support and assistance visit scu.edu.au/iass