1. Outstanding Fields of Business School of the University of New South Wales
In the 2021 QS ranking, the University of New South Wales is ranked 44th in the world. NSW Business School focuses on strengthening students' professional knowledge and becoming highly employable graduates. Students will be recognized by AACSB and EQUIS world-class business schools!
The school’s unique degree combines classroom education with a range of professional learning opportunities, which is unique to UNSW Business School. The experience of these career accelerators will provide students with skills, experience, and connections with the industry to enable students to quickly enter the business world.

Outstanding Fields of Business School of the University of New South Wales
World No. 1: Risk and Actuarial Science
Australia No. 1: Information System
World Top 20: Accounting and Finance
World Top 50: Economics, Business and Management
Master of Actuarial Studies
Course length: 1.7 years
Start date: February/June/September
Tuition fee: 48240 Australian dollars/year
Entry Requirements:
Bachelor degree, majoring in actuarial science, econometrics, mathematics, statistics, with an average score of 65%+
If the undergraduate is actuarial, you can apply for credit exemption
Master of Business
Course length: 1.7 years
Start date: February/June/September
Tuition fee: 48240 Australian dollars/year
Professional direction:
1) Accounting
2) Business Analytics
3) BusinessStrategy
4) Economics and Finance
5) Finance
6) FinancialTechnology
7) GlobalSustainability and Social Impact
8) Human ResourceManagement
9) Innovation and Entrepreneurship
10) InternationalBusiness
11) ManagementAccounting
12) Marketing
13) MarketingAnalytics
14) RiskManagement
Entry Requirements:
Bachelor degree with an average score of 65%+
If the undergraduate is a business major, you can apply for a maximum of 4 credits for exemption.
2. ANU scientific research project assists the research and development of holographic screen mobile phones
Researchers from the Australian National University (ANU) and the University of Jena (FSU) will jointly develop a technology that will make smartphones thinner and lighter while also generating holographic projections.
The imaging technology developed by these doctoral researchers can turn science fiction movies such as "Star Wars" into reality. Holographic projection can perform a series of extremely complicated operations on light, store all the information contained in the light, and reproduce it in a 3D stereoscopic form. In contrast, ordinary photos and computer monitors can only record and present part of 2D plane information.
With the support of the International Joint Research and Training Working Group, 39 PhD students in optics and photonics from the two universities will receive 5 million euros in funding from the German Science Foundation and additional funding from the Australian National Institute. With the reopening of the borders between countries, the student research project will begin operation early next year and will continue until 2026. PhD candidates will receive funding to go to two universities to conduct research in person, and are expected to obtain a double doctorate degree.
