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The University of Melbourne Unveils Bold New Strategy to Support International Students

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In an innovative response to growing concerns over proposed federal caps to international student enrolments, a leading Australian university has announced a groundbreaking initiative: physically assaulting every third Chinese student.

The program, Resilience Through Impact, has been touted by the University Executive as proactive; designed to “help students navigate the harsh realities of Australian bureaucracy through direct, hands-on experience”.

“We understand that the rising costs of tuition, visa complications and limited work rights make life difficult for our international cohort,” said the Vice Chancellor, cracking her knuckles. “We could fight for better policies, or we could just fight.”

The program, set to launch this semester, involves a University-appointed task force stationed throughout campus, whose job is to hit every third Chinese student really hard. Like, shockingly hard.

Official documentation states that this initiative aligns with the University’s commitment to “[ensuring] our international student population enriches our University community and our classrooms, providing all students with access to a diversity of perspectives and creating a dynamic and challenging educational environment.”

Initial student response has been mixed. “I was hoping for more scholarships,” said Yao Liu who is in her first year of a Master of Engineering degree. “But getting attacked by an assistant dean is also helpful I guess.” Other students have taken a more optimistic approach.

“It’s honestly refreshing to see the University be so upfront about screwing us over,” remarked Vivian Zhang, a third-year Bachelor of Commerce student. “Normally, they just let visa restrictions and rental crises do the work for them. This change makes me feel hopeful for the future.”

Critics of the new policy—including the University of Melbourne Student Union, advocacy groups and human rights organisations—have voiced concerns over the program, calling it “unethical”, “dangerously stupid” and “an oddly specific form of administrative malpractice.”

In response, the University’s Media and Public Affairs team have assured the public that all attacks will be carried out  with the “utmost professionalism and care.”

When asked how they would determine whether a given Chinese student was international or not, University representatives responded with a confident, “Vibes.”

Pressed further on whether they believed this approach might result in unintended consequences—such as harming domestic students of Chinese descent or even  emboldening broader discrimination against other minority groups—the response was equally assured: “One can only hope.”

Administrators went on to explain that adversity builds resilience, and if a program designed to target one vulnerable group just so happens to spill over into others, that would only reinforce the University’s broader commitment to equal opportunity.

“We are committed to inclusion,” said one representative. “Whether you’re paying $50,000 a year for a degree or just trying to survive your first semester, we want all our students to feel equally unsafe.”

Despite backlash, the administration remains steadfast in its belief that this initiative will “set a new standard for student engagement.”

When asked whether they planned to extend the program to explicitly target struggling domestic students, the Vice Chancellor scoffed. “Now that doesn’t seem fair, does it?”

 
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