Universities under fire as Chinese students fail and the desperate ones resort to cheating

Masters degree students at the University of Sydney's prestigious business school may have to undergo a compulsory English language course after the university revealed that more than 400 students, mainly from China, failed core units of their masters’ degree.
About 37 per cent of the 1,200 students studying the Critical Thinking in Business course were given a fail grade after the first semester, and about 12 per cent of students in the Succeeding in Business course also failed, according to a report on the ABC.
The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) has weighed into the stoush between the university and the group of students who complained that the university did not prepare them properly for the course.
NTEU president Jeanie Rae said universities should resist pressure to pass under-performing students, but in this case their treatment seemed unfair.
"I think the university needs to be much more honest about it, to me holding an exam at the end of a course and then wiping the students off after they've already paid their money to me seems quite cynical...If the students needed greater language skills, why were these students let in and given places if there were real doubts about their capacity to successfully complete?" she said.
University of Sydney Business School Deputy Dean (Education), Professor John Shields, however said English was not the only reason some Chinese students struggled with the course.
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