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Are Uni Prep programs any good?

Yes. They are good.

Enabling courses, like Uni Prep, are delivered in schools in partnerships between the school and a university.

Students who go to uni from an enabling course do almost as well as those who do ATAR.

 If alternative pathways are so good, why do ATAR?

The traditional way from school to uni is via ATAR (Australian Tertiary Admission Rank) which is based on results achieved across ATAR subjects in years 11 and 12.

ATAR is the best pathway to uni if you want to go into competitive degrees like medicine, law, engineering or specialist science programs.

Case Study of One

If you study any ATAR subject, you will have an advantage if you study that subject at university. I studied economics at school, loved it, so chose to study it at university. From day one, I was off to a great start.

Essential V Desirable ATAR Subjects

Some courses have essential ATAR prerequisites, like Math Methods, Physics, and/or Chemistry. You can check out the prerequisites required for 2028 in the University Admissions Guide.

Scholarships for ATAR Students

Most unis provide academic scholarships for students who do well in their ATAR scores. Academic superstars can be successful in their applications for several scholarships.

Alternative Pathways

ECU’s UniPrep, Curtin’s UniReady, Murdoch’s On Track and Notre Dame’s UniPath are non-ATAR entry pathway to uni that many schools offer.  

They all build academic skills, such as time management, research, academic reading and writing and maths. They can also focus on discipline-specific knowledge and on skills such as confidence and critical thinking.

ECU Uni Prep

Do Alternative Pathways Work?

The Australian Centre for Student Equity and Success analysed enabling programs delivered by 94 high schools around Australia. This included surveys of 2,000 students enrolled between 2021 and 2023:

We found 79% of the group completed the program, and 660 students progressed to uni in 2022–2024.

Of those who went onto university study, 75% continued into second year. This compares to 79% for ATAR entrants.

Read more about non-ATAR pathways at The Conversation, 29 June 2026

Find the full report HERE.