Nikola Cowin, pictured with her baby daughter and husband Matthew Smart, says she was unknowingly signed to a student loan by a misleading recruiter.
Share and Follow

It was a cold call that came at a vulnerable time for Adelaide woman Nikola Cowin.

Back in 2014, Cowin was an out-of-work student, studying a science degree at Flinders University.

On the other end of the line was a recruiter whose goal was to sign up as many students as possible to the now discredited and defunct tertiary training provider, Franklyn Scholar.

Nikola Cowin, pictured with her baby daughter and husband Matthew Smart, says she was unknowingly signed to a student loan by a misleading recruiter.
Nikola Cowin, pictured with her baby daughter and partner Matthew Smart, says she was unknowingly signed to a student loan by a misleading recruiter. (Supplied)

Cowin believes the recruiter obtained her number from one of the popular job websites she was using to apply for work, such as SEEK or CareerOne.

“They were targeting people who were pretty much jobless, which, looking back on it now, is rather dodgy,” Cowin said.

The recruiter offered to sign Cowin up to an online business management course.

“They were saying it would increase my chances of being able to get work by having that knowledge under my belt,” she said.

Cowin claims the recruiter told her the course was free.

“They were saying, ‘It’s government-funded, so there really isn’t anything to lose’,” she said.

Like thousands of other students, Cowin was signed up on the spot during that phone call.

Cowin said she was a little sceptical at first, and wondered whether the course was a scam, but she was quickly sent her email login and set up with a trainer.

“I didn’t have any reason to really question it. I figured, if it was a scam, it was an elaborate scam,” Cowin said.

Cowin spent the next two years completing the course, while also working on her university degree.

It wasn’t until 2019, about five years after she was first signed up to the Franklyn Scholar course, that she got a nasty surprise.

“My best friend and I were talking about HECS debts, and I told her what mine was at and she said, ‘You’ve only done a uni course, it shouldn’t be that big’,” Cowin said.

Having not yet hit the income level where compulsory payments would kick in, Cowin had never thought too deeply about her study loans.

After contacting her university and the tax office, Cowin was told she had a large debt from Franklyn Scholar, through the VET FEE-HELP (VFH) scheme.

Due to yearly indexation being applied, that debt now amounts to $35,880.

The news left Cowin shocked and confused.

“I was thinking, hang on, I wasn’t meant to be charged for that course. What’s going on here?” she said.

Cowin said she was especially puzzled about how Franklyn Scholar was able to process her debt through the VFH scheme, as she had not signed any forms.

Having previously gone through the process with Flinders University, Cowin said she knew she needed to sign a Commonwealth Assistance Form (CAF) to apply for the loan.

“I never signed anything. If there was a (CAF), it was fabricated,” Cowin said.

“I started investigating Franklyn Scholar a bit more and found out that they no longer existed – that’s when the saga began.”

Franklyn Scholar was deregistered by the Australian Skills Quality Authority in 2017 as part of a broader crackdown by the watchdog on training providers demonstrating inappropriate conduct.

“A period of rapid expansion in enrolments across the VET FEE-HELP sector from 2014 has been attributed in many cases to the inappropriate conduct of providers, who used aggressive marketing tactics, including offering inducements and ‘free courses’,” a Department of Employment and Workplace Relations document, released last year under a Freedom of Information request by Cowin’s partner, Matthew Smart, states.

A Deloitte audit, commissioned by the department, found 86 per cent of Franklyn Scholar students had no online activity between July 2015 and May 2016, and many students had been enrolled without their knowledge.

In 2017, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) took an education broker that recruited some students for Franklyn Scholar, among other tertiary education providers, to court.

The broker, Acquire Learning, was found by the Federal Court to have made unsolicited telephone calls to some job applicants for the purpose of enrolling them on the spot and engaged in “misleading or deceptive conduct”.

In October 2019, the Department of Employment and Workplace Relations agreed to waive the FEE-HELP debts of students of Franklyn Scholar who had not completed their courses.

Crucially, however, the debts would not be wiped for students like Cowin, who finished their course.

Cowin said the decision by the department was unfair and needed to be changed.

“It’s a bit unfair to say that just because I finished it, I don’t deserve a refund when I didn’t know what was going on,” she said.

“If I knew what was happening, or the charges that I was going to incur, I never would have finished it.”

Cowin, with the help of her partner, Smart, has been fighting to get her debt waived for the past six years, first lodging a complaint with the VET Student Loan Ombudsman and then making an application to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT).

Both attempts were unsuccessful, as was her latest request to the Department of Finance to waive her debt.

In a decision made last month, the Department of Finance upheld Cowin’s debt, dismissing her argument that she never signed any loan documents and was told the course was free.

The department cited findings from the 2016 Deloitte audit of 331 Franklyn Scholar students, which showed CAFs were found for around 95 per cent of cases.

While an education department official had been unable to find Cowin’s CAF, and Franklyn Scholar’s liquidation made it difficult, if not impossible, for her to chase down a copy herself, that did not mean it didn’t exist, the department concluded.

The department noted Cowin should have also received a Commonwealth Assistance Notice at the time, which included the details of her VFH debt, and this would have also made her aware she was signing up to a loan.

However, Cowin said she did not received any such notice, which is typically sent by the education provider, either.

The decision over his partner’s debt had come as a hard blow to both of them, Smart said, adding that it felt like the system had failed, leaving them with a large, unjust debt.

“It’s obviously very frustrating. We’re young parents now. We don’t earn large salaries or anything. We just try and get by,” he said.

“It just doesn’t make sense. Nikola never signed any forms. Why would she sign up for a double diploma at twice the cost of her uni degree?”

Regulations require education providers to keep student records on file for seven years.

Smart said the department ought to have take over Franklyn Scholar’s record-keeping after the college was deregistered.

A Department of Finance spokesperson told 9news.com.au waiving debts was a “mechanism of last resort”.

“Each request is considered on its individual merits. There is no situation which creates an automatic entitlement to a waiver of debt.”

The department could not specifically comment on Cowin’s case due to privacy reasons, the spokesperson said.

Share and Follow
You May Also Like

Israel Plans Shutdown of Over 30 Humanitarian Groups in Gaza

Israel says it has suspended more than two dozen humanitarian organisations, including…
Granddaughter of John F Kennedy dies weeks after terminal cancer reveal

Tragic Loss: JFK’s Granddaughter Succumbs to Cancer Weeks After Diagnosis

Tatiana Schlossberg, known for her work as an environmental journalist and as…
Queensland floods

Tragic Loss of Life in Queensland as Torrential Rains Persist

A man has died in Queensland floodwaters as the state braces for…
The Tarago lost control and rolled around 5.30 this morning.

Tragic Minivan Rollover on Remote Highway Claims Two Lives, Leaves Six Injured: What We Know

Two people have died and six others have been rushed to hospital…
New Year's Eve: Sydney celebrates 2026 with spectacular fireworks as city ushers in new year after honouring Bondi victims - live updates

Sydney Rings in 2026 with Dazzling New Year’s Eve Fireworks and Tributes to Bondi Victims – Live Coverage

As the clock ticks down on the last hours of 2025, the…

UAE Announces Withdrawal of Remaining Troops from Yemen Amid Escalating Crisis After Saudi Airstrike

The United Arab Emirates said it was pulling its remaining forces out…
New signage, The Donald J. Trump and The John F. Kennedy Memorial Center For The Performing Arts, is unveiled on the Kennedy Centre.

Trump’s Name Sparks Mass Artist Exodus from Iconic Arts Venue

The Kennedy Centre is ending the year with a new round of…
Sam Kerr and Kristie Mewis marry in private ceremony in Perth

Inside the Romantic Perth Wedding of Soccer Stars Sam Kerr and Kristie Mewis

Renowned Australian footballer Sam Kerr has tied the knot with her partner,…