UWA announces fee hikes ahead of higher education reform

By Candice Barnes
Updated September 24 2014 - 2:08pm, first published 1:19pm
In the case of UWA's most popular course – science - fees would need to rise to more than $14,000 just to compensate for recent funding cuts without raising a dollar for the university. Photo: Bohdan Warchomij
In the case of UWA's most popular course – science - fees would need to rise to more than $14,000 just to compensate for recent funding cuts without raising a dollar for the university. Photo: Bohdan Warchomij
In the case of UWA's most popular course – science - fees would need to rise to more than $14,000 just to compensate for recent funding cuts without raising a dollar for the university. Photo: Bohdan Warchomij
In the case of UWA's most popular course – science - fees would need to rise to more than $14,000 just to compensate for recent funding cuts without raising a dollar for the university. Photo: Bohdan Warchomij
In the case of UWA's most popular course – science - fees would need to rise to more than $14,000 just to compensate for recent funding cuts without raising a dollar for the university. Photo: Bohdan Warchomij
In the case of UWA's most popular course – science - fees would need to rise to more than $14,000 just to compensate for recent funding cuts without raising a dollar for the university. Photo: Bohdan Warchomij
In the case of UWA's most popular course – science - fees would need to rise to more than $14,000 just to compensate for recent funding cuts without raising a dollar for the university. Photo: Bohdan Warchomij
In the case of UWA's most popular course – science - fees would need to rise to more than $14,000 just to compensate for recent funding cuts without raising a dollar for the university. Photo: Bohdan Warchomij

Students at the University of Western Australia could soon be paying more for their undergraduate degrees, if the federal government's planned higher education reform package is passed.

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