Global Horizons - The Australian International Education Podcast

Global Society

Global Horizons is Australia’s international education podcast. Each episode is focused on the stories that make our industry just so great to work in. Sometimes the stories will be industry news and current affairs. Other times, we’ll dive into a guest's personal career and travel stories on the show. We’ll also have episodes dedicated to unpacking industry trends or helping you to understand the nuances of one of international education’s many specialisations, like learning abroad, compliance, marketing and more. Our goal is to showcase the stories, knowledge and impact of our industry.

  1. Mark Pettitt on risk, curiosity and building something that lasts

    3d ago

    Mark Pettitt on risk, curiosity and building something that lasts

    When Rob Malicki sits down with Mark Pettitt, the conversation begins in a place few people would expect: Rostov-on-Don in the mid-1990s. What starts as a childhood fascination with Russia, sparked by reading Animal Farm, turns into a story about teaching English in a city near the Ukrainian border just a few years after Perestroika. Mark reflects on arriving in a place that felt harsh and unfamiliar on the surface, only to find extraordinary warmth and generosity once he was invited into people’s homes. It is also, as it turns out, where he met his future wife. From there, the conversation moves through travel, family, entrepreneurship and the work of building Edified. Mark talks about the kind of life he and his wife wanted their children to experience, including a period living in Paris, and why he believes young people benefit from both roots and wings. He also reflects on his first experiments with business, the attraction of starting new things, and the challenge of scaling a company without losing the human quality that made it valuable in the first place. There is also a thoughtful thread running through the episode about failure, resilience and what it means to keep going. Mark speaks candidly about the emotional side of entrepreneurship, the need to recover quickly when things do not work, and the importance of building ideas with clients rather than simply hoping the market will appear once something is finished. Highlights include: how a childhood curiosity about Russia led Mark to teach English there in the 1990swhat it was like living in Rostov-on-Don just after the Soviet erameeting his wife while teaching overseasthe kind of travel experiences he wanted his own children to havewhy entrepreneurship suited him more than business-as-usual workwhat he has learned about failure, risk and building new ideasthe challenge of growing Edified without losing its personal touch It is a conversation about business, certainly, but also about place, identity, family and the experiences that quietly shape a person over time. Global Horizons is a production of The Global Society, Australia’s Learning Abroad support company. Our editor is Len Zamora and our distribution specialist is Gelo Ablao. Rob Malicki is the executive editor and host. The podcast wouldn’t be possible without The Koala News, Australia’s international education news website. This episode is supported by Choosing Your Uni, Australia's unique, AI-powered platform that helps domestic and international students to find the right institution for them, and that helps Australian institutions to access new markets. For guest suggestions and feedback, email podcast@globalsociety.com.au

    39 min
  2. Canada’s International Education Warning, Australia’s VET Freeze, and the Politics of Migration

    May 28

    Canada’s International Education Warning, Australia’s VET Freeze, and the Politics of Migration

    Canada, we have a problem. And, if we’re being honest, Australia might have a very similar one. In this episode of Global Horizons, Rob Malicki and Dirk Mulder unpack a week in international education that starts with Canada’s positioning problem and quickly turns into a much bigger conversation about policy clarity, political trust, skilled migration, international students, VET, and whether governments are actually pulling the right levers. Prompted by a sharp op-ed from Christine Wack at IDP, Rob and Dirk dig into one of the biggest questions facing countries like Canada and Australia: if we want to attract global talent, build skilled workforces and compete for bright minds, are our policy settings actually helping us do that? Spoiler: not necessarily. The conversation then turns to Australia’s 12-month freeze on new CRICOS applications for parts of the VET sector, with exemptions for government schools, state-owned TAFEs and public universities. Which, depending on how charitable you’re feeling, either looks like an integrity measure, a migration-management tool, or something uncomfortably anti-competitive. Also on the agenda: the Coalition’s budget reply, the political temptation to keep blaming migration, why international education keeps getting caught up in the broader net overseas migration debate, and whether major parties are missing what voters are actually angry about. Along the way, Rob and Dirk also find time for the important things: Sydney rain, Milo weather, NAFSA FOMO, petrol prices, and the enormous success of the Choosing Your Uni National Virtual Expo, which attracted more than 5,600 registrations and 13,000 unique visitors during expo week. In this episode, we cover: Canada’s international education positioning problem, and why Australia should pay attentionWhy prospective students are increasingly looking for employability, quality, safety and policy clarityThe Australian Government’s 12-month freeze on new CRICOS applications in parts of the VET sectorWhat the VET freeze could mean for private providers, ELICOS, TAFEs and workforce shortagesThe Coalition’s migration rhetoric and what it might mean for international educationWhy the net overseas migration debate keeps dragging international students into the political spotlightIDP’s new IELTS centre in Chengdu and why it matters for the company’s China strategyThe Tertiary Scholarship Fund’s 2026 Awards for Excellence, and a lovely Melbourne story of generosity through educationA tribute to Neale Daniher, his remarkable public fight against motor neurone disease, and the power of not walking past the chance to do a little bit of goodThere are some weeks where international education feels like a sector. And then there are weeks where it feels like a mirror, reflecting back bigger questions about trust, politics, workforce planning, national identity and whether our leaders are thinking far enough ahead. This is one of those weeks. Global Horizons is a production of The Global Society, Australia’s Learning Abroad support company. Our editor is Len Zamora and our distribution specialist is Gelo Ablao. Rob Malicki is the executive editor and host. The podcast wouldn’t be possible without The Koala News, Australia’s international education news website. This episode is supported by Choosing Your Uni, Australia's unique, AI-powered platform that helps domestic and international students to find the right institution for them, and that helps Australian institutions to access new markets. Global Horizons is the official podcast of the ⁠AIEC conference⁠! Registrations are already open... grab your spot early!

    37 min
  3. "Let's Recruit Students From Antarctica!" Not the stupidest suggestion of the year (+ real news)

    May 14

    "Let's Recruit Students From Antarctica!" Not the stupidest suggestion of the year (+ real news)

    In this episode of the Global Horizons podcast, Rob Malicki and Dirk Mulder record on budget day and work through a packed run of developments affecting international education. They start with two major new research releases from IDP and Studyportals, both pointing to the same broad shift: visa certainty is becoming a much more important factor in student decision-making. From there, they discuss what that means for Australia at a time when policy uncertainty is already weighing on the sector. The conversation then moves into a series of stories that each, in different ways, point to the same underlying tension. Home Affairs is promoting recruitment in emerging markets, even as visa settings continue to create frustration and uncertainty. A new report from the Migrant Justice Centre highlights the scale of wage underpayment affecting international students. And Mike Ferguson offers a thoughtful reflection on the Simplified Student Visa Framework, including a number of practical ideas for how the system could be updated to better reflect current conditions. Highlights include: what the latest IDP and Studyportals research is saying about student behaviourwhy visa certainty is now playing a much bigger role in destination choicethe tension between recruitment ambitions and current Home Affairs settingsa major new report on international student underpaymentMike Ferguson’s ideas for improving the student visa systemAIEC 2026 news and the opening of the Australian Export Awards This episode covers a lot of ground, but the thread running through it is fairly clear: international education is being shaped not just by demand, but by confidence, consistency and trust. Global Horizons is a production of The Global Society, Australia’s Learning Abroad support company. Our editor is Len Zamora and our distribution specialist is Gelo Ablao. Rob Malicki is the executive editor and host. The podcast wouldn’t be possible without The Koala News, Australia’s international education news website. This episode is supported by Choosing Your Uni, Australia's unique, AI-powered platform that helps domestic and international students to find the right institution for them, and that helps Australian institutions to access new markets. For guest suggestions and feedback, email podcast@globalsociety.com.au

    45 min
  4. Guie Hartney on resilience, international education and a life shaped by travel

    May 7

    Guie Hartney on resilience, international education and a life shaped by travel

    What does it take to stay calm in a sector that seems determined to keep everyone on their toes? If you ask Guie Hartney, it might start with a smile, a little perspective, and a willingness to embrace the chaos. In this warm, funny and wide-ranging conversation, Guie reflects on a life shaped by travel, language, resilience and curiosity. From growing up in Mexico and moving to Australia, to working in Japan’s seafood trade, backpacking through Mongolia, and eventually finding her place in international education, her story is full of unexpected turns and hard-won wisdom. We also talk about leadership, mentorship, stress, and the habits that help us keep going when things get tough. Highlights include: Guie’s wonderfully honest reflections on stress and perspective a brilliant origin story involving languages, Japan and a surprise career turn backpacking tales from China and Mongolia insights on mentoring others and leading with calm one unforgettable Korean business dinner involving live octopus Global Horizons is a production of The Global Society, Australia’s Learning Abroad support company. Our editor is Len Zamora and our distribution specialist is Angelo Ablao. Rob Malicki is the executive editor and host. The podcast wouldn’t be possible without The Koala News, Australia’s international education news website. This episode is supported by Choosing Your Uni, Australia's unique, AI-powered platform that helps domestic and international students to find the right institution for them, and that helps Australian institutions to access new markets. For guest suggestions and feedback, email podcast@globalsociety.com.au

    43 min
  5. Visa pressure, rejected applications and what it means for international education

    Apr 30

    Visa pressure, rejected applications and what it means for international education

    In this episode of the Global Horizons podcast, Rob Malicki and Dirk Mulder focus on one issue that is dominating the sector right now: visas. They begin with John Chew’s recent commentary on the growing lack of clarity, consistency and trust in Australia’s student visa system, and what that means for institutions, students and the country’s reputation more broadly. From there, they unpack new data on just how much money the government is making from international education visa fees, including a striking figure tied to rejected applications, and ask what that says about the way the system is currently operating. The conversation then turns to Nepal, where visa grant rates have dropped sharply in a short period of time, raising deeper questions about transparency, financial assessment and the burden being placed on institutions to interpret rules that do not appear to be clearly published or consistently understood. Rob and Dirk also reflect on what this kind of uncertainty may be doing to trust in Australia, particularly for students and families making major financial sacrifices simply to apply. There is also some more constructive news in the episode. Rob and Dirk discuss the launch of the new Australian International Education Consultants Association, which brings together two existing agent bodies into a single national association, and they touch on IDP’s move into Malaysia, a sign of how student mobility patterns may continue to shift as the major destination countries become more difficult to navigate. Highlights include: John Chew’s argument that the visa system is becoming harder to trustnew figures on how much revenue is being generated from international education visa feesthe sharp fall in visa grant rates for Nepalquestions around financial scrutiny, transparency and fairnessthe launch of a new national association for education consultantswhy Malaysia is becoming a more significant destination in the global mix Global Horizons is a production of The Global Society, Australia’s Learning Abroad support company. Our editor is Len Zamora and our distribution specialist is Gelo Ablao. Rob Malicki is the executive editor and host. The podcast wouldn’t be possible without The Koala News, Australia’s international education news website. This episode is supported by Choosing Your Uni, Australia's unique, AI-powered platform that helps domestic and international students to find the right institution for them, and that helps Australian institutions to access new markets. For guest suggestions and feedback, email podcast@globalsociety.com.au

    38 min
  6. From a Backpack and a Near-Missed Flight to the Frontlines of University Change

    Apr 23

    From a Backpack and a Near-Missed Flight to the Frontlines of University Change

    When I sat down with Tom Gifford, I knew we’d end up talking about international education. What I didn’t quite expect was that we’d begin with a backpacker visa panic, a wrongly dated Qantas ticket, and one very stern airline employee who may, in her own quiet way, have changed the course of his life. Because that’s the thing about conversations like this one. What starts as a chat about careers and universities quickly becomes something bigger. In Tom’s case, it’s a story that runs from Birmingham to Sydney, through the APY Lands of remote South Australia, into state government, on to the University of Adelaide, and eventually into a major leadership role at RMIT. Along the way, there are stories about service, community, mobility, ambition, and the very human moments that shape a life more than any carefully laid plan ever could. Tom is thoughtful, grounded and refreshingly practical. He talks with real warmth about the communities he worked with early in his career, the complexity and energy of university life, and the challenge, and opportunity, of making student experiences better at scale. There’s also a fascinating thread running through this episode about admissions, AI, and what it might actually mean for universities to embrace change rather than simply talk about it. In this episode, we get into: Tom’s very British backpacker arrival in Australia, and the airport moment that nearly went very differently working in remote South Australia with young Indigenous students preparing for employment opportunities the sense of community and care that left a lasting impression on him how a single cold email led to an unexpected role in South Australian state government the winding path into international education, and eventually into leadership at RMIT why admissions might be one of the most important, and most overlooked, parts of the student experience the way AI is already reshaping universities, from student support to leadership thinking why Delhi is one of Tom’s favourite places in the world, and what he loves about its energy and chaos the challenge of leading at scale while still keeping sight of the individual student journey What I enjoyed most about this conversation is that Tom never sounds abstract, even when he’s talking about very big things. Whether it’s an admissions system, a team of 180, a walk through Delhi, or a memory from the outback, he brings it back to people. To service. To human potential. To that little spark that can change someone’s direction. And maybe that’s what sits at the heart of this episode. Not just leadership, or strategy, or the future of universities, but the reminder that careers are often shaped in messy, unexpected ways, by landscapes, by timing, by risk, by luck, and by the people who decide to back us when they don’t have to. Global Horizons is a production of The Global Society, Australia’s Learning Abroad support company. Our editor is Len Zamora and our distribution specialist is Angelo Ablao. Rob Malicki is the executive editor and host. The podcast wouldn’t be possible without The Koala News, Australia’s international education news website. This episode is supported by Choosing Your Uni, Australia's unique, AI-powered platform that helps domestic and international students to find the right institution for them, and that helps Australian institutions to access new markets. For guest suggestions and feedback, email podcast@globalsociety.com.au

    35 min
  7. Recession, policy pressure and student recruitment realities (with special guest Nico Chu from Sinorbis)

    Apr 16

    Recession, policy pressure and student recruitment realities (with special guest Nico Chu from Sinorbis)

    In this episode of the Koala News Global Horizons podcast, Rob Malicki and Dirk Mulder discuss the economic and policy backdrop shaping international education right now. They unpack growing recession concerns, the role international education plays in local and national economies, and the gap between the public narrative around the sector and what the data may actually be telling us. They also look at the government’s delayed response to the international education inquiry, and a more positive initiative out of Victoria that connects international students with community through the AFL. They’re then joined by Nico Chu from Sinorbis, who brings a practical perspective on what has changed in international student recruitment over the past few years. Nico talks about a market that is not simply shrinking, but becoming more competitive, more price-sensitive and more demanding. He also shares insights from recent research on student communication, including why speed matters, why fragmented communication causes real frustration, and why institutions can no longer rely on the old playbook if they want to convert student interest into enrolments. Highlights include: recession concerns and what a contraction in international education could mean economicallythe difference between policy, perception and sector realitythe government’s response to the long-running international education inquirya Victorian initiative using AFL to build student inclusion and connectionNico Chu’s take on competition, conversion and the changing expectations of prospective studentsGlobal Horizons is a production of The Global Society, Australia’s Learning Abroad support company. Our editor is Len Zamora and our distribution specialist is Gelo Ablao. Rob Malicki is the executive editor and host. The podcast wouldn’t be possible without The Koala News, Australia’s international education news website. Global Horizons is the OFFICIAL podcast of the AIEC... a real privilege for us since it is the "do not miss" event of the year. Check out the conference website at ⁠aiec.idp.com This episode is supported by Choosing Your Uni, Australia's unique, AI-powered platform that helps domestic and international students to find the right institution for them, and that helps Australian institutions to access new markets. For guest suggestions and feedback, email podcast@globalsociety.com.au

    1h 5m

About

Global Horizons is Australia’s international education podcast. Each episode is focused on the stories that make our industry just so great to work in. Sometimes the stories will be industry news and current affairs. Other times, we’ll dive into a guest's personal career and travel stories on the show. We’ll also have episodes dedicated to unpacking industry trends or helping you to understand the nuances of one of international education’s many specialisations, like learning abroad, compliance, marketing and more. Our goal is to showcase the stories, knowledge and impact of our industry.

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