![]() ![]() Students who successfully complete the APP can transfer into any degree at UniSA either in-person or online.ĪPP Director Dr Nazz Oldham says the APP’s focus is on preparing First Nations students to succeed at university. Since 2017, 36 students have graduated from the APP, with 11 more expected to complete the program by mid-2023. The APP is taught in five locations across SA including Adelaide, Ceduna, Mt Gambier, Pt Lincoln, and Whyalla. It is designed for people who don’t meet standard university entry requirements, such as students without an ATAR. ![]() The APP is a one-and-a-half-year program to help Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students embrace university study. Last week, Lovie and Zac graduated from the APP alongside their peers at UniSA’s Whyalla graduation ceremony. Mother and son duo Lavinia ‘Lovie’ Richards and Zac Nelson-Richards have shared many moments in life together but never thought studying at university would be one of them.īarngarla Elder and Port Lincoln local Lovie, 65, and her son Zac, 26, have spent the last few years studying University of South Australia’s Aboriginal Pathway Program (APP) a program that prepares Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students for university study. Lavinia ‘Lovie’ Richards, left, with APP Program Regional Tutor Barbie Clutterbuck and Zac Nelson-Richards. ![]()
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