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Education in Australia

Education in Australia encompasses the sectors of early childhood education[8] (preschool) and primary education (primary schools), followed by secondary education (high schools), and finally tertiary education, which includes higher education (universities and other higher education providers) and vocational education (registered training organisations).[9] Regulation and funding of education is primarily the responsibility of the States and territories;[2] however, the Australian Government also plays a funding role.[10]

Education in Australia
Australian Government
Minister for EducationJason Clare
National education budget (2015)
BudgetA$111.8 billion[1]
5.9 percent of GDP
General details
Primary languagesEnglish
System typeState[2]
Established compulsory education1830s[3]
1870s[3]
Literacy (2003)
Total99%[4]
Male99%[4]
Female99%[4]
Enrollment (2008)
Total20.4% of population[5][6]
Primary1.9 million[5]
Secondary1.4 million[5]
Post secondary1 million[7]

Education in Australia is compulsory between the ages of four, five, or six[11] and fifteen, sixteen or seventeen, depending on the state or territory and the date of birth.[12]

For primary and secondary education, government schools educate approximately 60 per cent of Australian students, with approximately 40 per cent in non-government schools.[5] At the tertiary level, the majority of Australia's universities are public, and student fees are subsidised through a student loan program where payment becomes due when debtors reach a certain income level.

Underpinned by the Australian Qualifications Framework, implemented in 1995, Australia has adopted a national system of qualifications, encompassing higher education, vocational education and training (VET), and school-based education.[13] For primary and secondary schools, a national Australian Curriculum has been progressively developed and implemented since 2010.[14]

Australia is a leading global provider of education to international students, and in 2012 was ranked as the third-largest provider of international education after the United States and the United Kingdom.[15] Australia has the highest ratio of international students per head of population in the world by a large margin, with 812,000 international students enrolled in the nation's universities and vocational institutions in 2019.[16][17]

However, Australian students placed 16th in the world in reading, 29th in maths and 17th in science in the 2018 PISA study by the OCED. This continues a sharp decline in educational standards.[18][19][20][21]

The Education Index, published with the UN's Human Development Index in 2018, based on data from 2017, listed Australia as 0.929, the second-highest in the world.[22]

In 1966 the Australian Government signed the Convention against Discrimination in Education, which aimed to combat discrimination and racial segregation in the field of education. The Australian education system has suffered from the years of minimisation of funding, too often relying upon the full fee paying students from abroad across all levels of education, to prop up the short falls created by funding cuts. International full fee paying students, from primary school right through to Australia's universities have shown a slow decline in education standards. This is a result of decreased funding along with a stark rise in students from non english speaking backgrounds who's english language proficiency is a hindrance to their studies. Given the large numbers of students in the primary and secondary school system in some areas of Australia, especially the capital cities, who's english language skills are below the requirements of the school level they attend, a decrease in reading, writing and English skills are being observed. Class sizes have increased, this coupled with the growing work load on teachers trying to accommodate ESL students in main stream classes, has led to a lowering of outcomes for primary and secondary school children, especially in areas of low socioeconomic groups, where the highest proportion of new immigrants settle. More resources must be made available to english speaking students in these areas to compensate for the class time spent accommodating ESL students. There must also be more resources outside of mainstream classes made available to ESL students.

Regulation and funding edit

The regulation, operation, and funding of education is the responsibility of the states and territories,[2] because the Australian Government does not have a specific constitutional power to pass laws with concerning education.[23] However, the federal government helps to fund non-government schools,[24] helps to fund public universities and subsidises tertiary education through a national student loan scheme,[25] and regulates vocational education providers.[26]

Post-compulsory education is regulated within the Australian Qualifications Framework, a unified system of national qualifications in schools, vocational education and training, and the tertiary education sector.

The Australian Government's involvement in education has been the responsibility of several departments over the years,[note a] with the Department of Education, Skills and Employment being formed in 2020.

The academic year in Australia varies between States and institutions; however, it generally runs from late January/early February until early/mid-December for primary and secondary schools, with slight variations in the inter-term holidays[27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34] and TAFE colleges,[35][36][37] and from late February until mid-November for universities with seasonal holidays and breaks for each educational institute.[38]

Preschool edit

Historically, preschool and pre-prep programmes in Australia were relatively unregulated and not compulsory.[39] While still not mandatory for children to attend, the Federal Government has had a focus since 2009 on encouraging families to enrol their children (from around 4 years of age) in a preschool or kindergarten that delivers quality early childhood education and care[40] Federal and state legislation now requires preschool services to implement and deliver programming based on the nationally approved Early Years Learning Framework[41] The first exposure many Australian children have to learn with others outside of traditional parenting is daycare or a parent-run playgroup.[42] This sort of activity is not generally considered schooling, as preschool education is separate from primary school in all states and territories, except Western Australia where pre-school education is taught as part of the primary school system[43] and Victoria where the state framework, the Victorian Early Years Learning and Development Framework (VEYLDF) covers children from birth to 8 years old, is used by some schools over the national framework.[44] In Queensland, preschool programmes are often called Kindergarten or Pre-Prep and are usually privately run but attract state government funding if run for at least 600 hours a year and delivered by a registered teacher.[45]

Preschools are usually run by the state and territory governments, except in Victoria, South Australia and New South Wales where they are more often run by local councils, community groups or private organisations.[43] Preschool is offered to three- to five-year-olds; attendance numbers vary widely between the states, but 85.7% of children attended preschool the year before school.[46] The year before a child is due to attend primary school is the main year for preschool education. This year is far more commonly attended and may take the form of a few hours of activity during weekdays.[47] Most states of Australia now fund government preschools to offer 15 hours per week (600 hours over a year) for each enrolled child in the year before they commence formal schooling[48]

Primary and secondary education edit

 
People attending a primary school as a percentage of the local population at the 2011 census, geographically subdivided by statistical local area
 
People attending secondary school as a percentage of the local population at the 2011 census, geographically subdivided by statistical local area

10,584 registered schools were operating in Australia in 2019, of which 7,092 were government schools.[49] As of 2019, government schools educated 65.4% of all students.[50] In 2017, there were just under 282,000 teachers in Australian primary and secondary schools.[2] Of the non-government schools, nearly two-thirds were Catholic schools.[51] The major part of government-run schools' costs is met by the relevant state or territory government.[52] The Australian Government provides the majority of public funding for non-government schools, which is supplemented by states and territories.[53]

Non-government schools, both religious or secular typically charge compulsory tuition and other fees. Government schools provide education without compulsory tuition fees, although many government schools ask for payment of 'voluntary' fees to defray particular expenses.[54]

Regardless of whether a school is government or non-government, it is regulated by the same curriculum standards framework. The framework is administered by the Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority.[55] Most schools require students to wear prescribed school uniforms.[56] A school year in Australia starts in January and finishes in December.

History of school education in Australia edit

The first formal education in Australia began when the European convicts and settlers began to build the first public infrastructure, in the 19th century. The first schools were either built by ex-convicts or members of the Church.[57] The oldest school in continuous operation in Australia is Newcastle East Public School, founded in 1816.[58] Beginning in approximately 1905, many children of the Stolen Generations were educated like white children, with the aim of effectively assimilating them into the white community. This was made illegal in 1969.[59][60]

Compulsory attendance requirements edit

School education in Australia is compulsory between certain ages as specified by state or territory legislation. Depending on the state or territory, and date of birth of the child, school is compulsory from the age of five to six to the age of fifteen to seventeen.[12]

In the ACT,[61] NSW,[62] the Northern Territory,[63] Queensland,[64][65] South Australia,[66][67] Victoria,[68] and Western Australia,[69][70] children are legally required to attend school from the age of six years old, until the minimum leaving age. In Tasmania, the compulsory school starting age is 5 years old.[71] However, most children commence the preliminary year of formal schooling, in Pre-Year 1, between four and a half and five and a half years of age,[51] variously called kindergarten (sometimes called Year K),[72][73][74] reception,[75] preparation (also abbreviated as "prep")[76][77][78] and transition.[79]

As of 2010, the national apparent retention rate (ARR), a measure of student engagement that provides an indicator of the success of education systems in keeping students in school beyond the minimum leaving age, was 78 per cent for all full-time students in Year 12.[5][51]

Australian Curriculum edit

While state and territory governments are responsible for the regulation and delivery of school-based education within their jurisdiction, through the Council of Australian Governments, the Commonwealth Government has, since 2014, played an increasing role in the establishment of the Australian Curriculum that sets the expectations for what all young Australians should be taught, regardless of where they live in Australia or their background. The development of the Australian Curriculum is based on the principles of improving the quality, equity and transparency of Australia's education system.[80] The Australian Curriculum, for pre-Year 1 to Year 10, is made up of the following eight learning areas: English; Mathematics; Science; Humanities and Social Sciences; The Arts; Technologies; Health and Physical Education as well as Languages.[81] In the senior secondary Australian Curriculum, for Year 11 and Year 12, fifteen senior secondary subjects across English, Mathematics, Science, History and Geography were endorsed between 2012 and 2013. The Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority has mandated the achievement standards that describe the quality of learning (including the depth of understanding, the extent of knowledge, and the sophistication of skill) expected of students who have studied the content for each subject.[82]

Types of schools edit

The types of schools in Australia fall broadly into two categories: government schools, being those schools operated by state or territory departments or agencies; and non-government schools, being those schools that are not operated by government departments or agencies.[51] Non-government schools can be further classified, based on self-identification of the school's affiliation. Non-government schools are grouped for reporting as Catholic schools (including Catholic-affiliated independent schools)[83][84] or independent (other non-government schools).[51][78]

Government schools receive funding from the relevant state or territory government. Non-government schools receive funding from the Australian Government and relevant state or territory government;[51] and in most cases, parents are required to make a co-payment for their child's education.[54]

As of 2019 across primary and secondary education, approximately two-thirds of all school students attended government schools; with the remaining one-third of students educated in non-government schools.[50][51]

A small portion of students are legally home-schooled, particularly in rural areas.[85]

School years edit

Primary schools edit

Also sometimes called infants schools, Australia adopts the UNESCO term of primary school[86] that generally covers a child's education from pre-Year 1 and finish with Year 6. The duration of primary school years varies across each Australian state and territory, with most adopting seven years; except in South Australia, where, until 2022,[87] students finish with Year 7, making the duration of primary school eight years;[88]: [see "Primary"]  until they are 11, 12 or 13 years of age. Primary schools focus on developing essential literacy, numeracy and social skills, and provide foundational knowledge to children about the world around them.[89]

Secondary schools edit

Secondary schools in Australia are also called high schools[note b] and colleges (or junior, intermediate, or senior colleges). Secondary schools vary across each Australian state and territory, but they generally cover Year 7 to Year 10 (compulsory period of education) and senior secondary schools continue to Year 12.[90]

Middle schools edit

In the majority of Australian states and territories, middle schools are relatively uncommon. Students progress from primary school to secondary school.[91] As an alternative to the middle school model, some secondary schools divided their grades into "junior high school" (Years 7, 8, 9 and 10) and "senior high school" (Years 11 and 12). Some have three levels, "junior" (Years 7 and 8), "intermediate" (Years 9 and 10), and "senior" (Years 11 and 12).

In June 2006 the Northern Territory Government introduced a three-tier system featuring middle schools for Year 7 to Year 9 (approximate age 12–15) and high school for Year 10 to Year 12 (approximate age 15–18).[92]

Combined and central schools edit

In Australia, combined schools are schools that have classes from both primary and secondary year levels.[88]: [see "Combined school"]  These schools may be located in an urban, regional or rural area and can be government or non-government schools. As of 2019 there were approximately 500 Australian combined government schools[93]: [search "Combined school"]  and approximately 850 Australian combined non-government schools.[94]: [search "Combined school"] 

Central schools are predominantly, but not exclusively, government schools located in a rural area that provides both primary and lower secondary education to students, usually concluding at Year 10. As of 2019 there were 62 Australian central schools, and all except one were located in rural New South Wales.[95]: [search "Central school"]  In Western Australia, the term district high school is synonymous with central school.

Organisational structures edit

Schools are broadly categorised into government and non-government schools. The non-government schools are further categorised into Catholic schools and independent schools. As of 2018, 65.7% of students were enrolled in government schools, 19.7% in catholic schools and 14.6% in independent schools.[96]

Student enrolments by school affiliation, Australia, 2014–2018[96]
2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
Government 2,406,495 2,445,130 2,483,802 2,524,865 2,558,169
Non-government Catholic 765,539 757,749 767,050 766,870 765,735
Independent 529,857 540,304 547,374 557,490 569,930
Totals 3,694,101 3,750,973 3,798,226 3,849,225 3,893,834

Government schools edit

 
The Mac.Robertson Girls' High School, a government school in Melbourne CBD, pictured in 2007
 
Warwick High School, a government school in Warwick, Queensland, pictured in 2007
 
Quairading District High School, a government school in Quairading, Western Australia, pictured in 2018

Also called state schools or public schools, government schools educate approximately two-thirds of all school students in Australia.[50] If a student elects to attend a government school, they are required to attend a school within their local school district unless the student has dispensation to attend another school, usually approved based on academic merit, specialisation, or other reasons, such as a student disability.

Government schools are run by the respective state government agency.[52] They offer free education; however, many government schools ask parents to pay a contribution fee and a materials and services charge[54][97][98][99] for stationery, textbooks, sports, uniforms, school camps and other schooling costs that are not covered under government funding. In 2010 the additional cost for schooling was estimated to be on average $316 per year per child.[100][101]

Government schools may be further categorised into open or comprehensive schools, selective, special, and specialist schools; all defined below. In 2009 the Western Australia government introduced Independent Public Schools to describe a government school that, while a part of the state education system, was granted a higher degree of decision-making authority than a regular government school.[102] A similar reform was introduced in Queensland and, as of December 2018, 250 government schools commenced as independent public schools in Queensland.[103] In February 2014 the then Federal Education Minister, Christopher Pyne, announced a $70 million Independent Public Schools Initiative to support 1,500 Australian government schools to become more autonomous.[104]

Government hospital schools are located at some major hospitals and provide access to tuition for students who have extended stays in hospitals.[105][106][107][108]

Across Australia, the Federal Department of Education sets the overall national policy and direction for education in Australia. The following state and territory government departments are responsible for the administration of education within their respective jurisdictions:

Non-government schools edit

Schools from the non-government sector operate under the authority of state or territory governments but are not operated by government education departments. Schools from the non-government sector may operate as individual schools, in small groups or as a system such as those coordinated by the Catholic Education Commission in each state and territory.[88]: [see "non-government sector"]  All non-government schools in Australia receive funding from the Commonwealth government.[110]

Catholic schools edit

 
St Mary's College, Hobart, pictured in 2014. The college is affiliated with the Presentation Sisters, a religious institute of the Catholic Church.

The education system delivered by the Roman Catholic Church in Australia has grown from 18th-century foundations to be the second-biggest provider of school-based education in Australia.[83] As of 2018, one in five Australian students attended Catholic schools.[83][111] There are over 1,700 Catholic schools in Australia with more than 750,000 students enrolled, employing almost 60,000 teachers.[83][112]

Administrative oversight of Catholic education providers varies depending on the origins, ethos, and purpose of each education provider. Oversight of Catholic systemic schools may rest with a Catholic parish, diocese, or archdiocese;[83] while religious institutes have oversight of Catholic independent schools.[84]

The National Catholic Education Commission (NCEC), established by the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference through the Bishops Commission for Catholic Education, is tasked with maintaining liaison with the federal government and other key national education bodies and complements and supports the work of the state and territory Catholic education commissions.[113] While some Catholic schools operate independently via religious institutes,[84] the majority of Catholic schools, called systemic schools,[83] operate under the Canon Law jurisdiction of an ecclesiastical public juridic person, such as a bishop.[114]: 7  In practice, the bishop assigns a Catholic Education Office (CEO), Catholic Education Commission, Catholic Schools Offices, or a similar body[114]: 4  with daily operational responsibility for the leadership, efficient operation, and management of the Catholic systemic schools which educate in parish primary and regional secondary schools in Australia. These diocesan bodies are charged with the implementation and management of the policies of the diocese and the allocation and administration of the funds provided by the government and private sources to Catholic systemic schools, as well as the financial responsibilities for the administration of salaries for staff members.[115]

Most Catholic schools (96 per cent) are systemically funded, meaning that the government funding they nominally attract is provided to the relevant state Catholic Education Commission for needs-based distribution. Sixty-one Australian Catholic schools are non-systemically funded (independent schools) and receive government grants directly.[84]

Private schools edit

 
The chapel at Scotch College, Melbourne, a well-known Australian private school, that enrols students from early learning to Year 12

Private schools are non-government schools that are not operated by government authority and have a system of governance that ensures their independent operation. Such schools are typically operated by an independently elected school council or board of governors and range broadly in the type of school education provided and the socio-economics of the school community served. Some private schools are run by religious institutes; others have no religious affiliation and are driven by a national philosophy (such as international schools), pedagogical philosophy (such as Waldorf-Steiner schools), or specific needs (such as special schools).[116] As of 2018, including private schools run by Catholic religious institutes, of the 9,477 schools in Australia 1,140 schools (12 per cent) are in the private sector. In the same year, private schools enrolled over 617,000 students or 16 per cent of the Australian student population.[117]

Private school fees can vary from under $100 per month[118] to $3,200,[119][120] depending on the student's year level, the school's size, and the socioeconomics of the school community. In late 2018 it was reported that the most expensive private schools (such as the APS Schools, the AGSV Schools in Melbourne, the GPS Schools, QGSSSA Schools in Brisbane and the NSW GPS Schools, Combined Associated Schools and the ISA Schools in Sydney and New South Wales) charge fees of up to $500,000 for the thirteen years of private school education.[121][122][123]

Australian private schools broadly fall into the following categories:[117]

Types of Australian private schools
Broad description Examples of schools
Example school(s) name Examples of religious institute(s) or religious affiliation(s)
Schools affiliated with
Christian denominations
Anglican Canberra Grammar School (ACT), The King's School, Parramatta (NSW), The Southport School (QLD), St Peter's College, Adelaide (SA), The Hutchins School (TAS), Geelong Grammar (VIC), and St Hilda's Anglican School for Girls (WA)
Catholic[note c] St Edmund's College, Canberra (ACT), St John's College, Darwin (NT), St Joseph's College, Hunters Hill (NSW), Loreto College Coorparoo (QLD), Sacred Heart College, Adelaide (SA), St Mary's College, Hobart (TAS), Xavier College (VIC), and Trinity College, Perth (WA) Christian Brothers, Missionaries of the Sacred Heart, Daughters of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart, Marist Brothers, Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Presentation Sisters, Jesuits, and Opus Dei
Greek Orthodox St Spyridon College (NSW) and St George College, South Australia (SA)
Lutheran St Paul's College, Walla Walla (NSW), Good Shepherd Lutheran School (NT), Trinity Lutheran College (Queensland) (QLD), Concordia College, Adelaide (SA), Eastside Lutheran College (TAS), Lakeside College (VIC), Living Waters Lutheran College (WA)
Uniting Church Newington College (NSW), St Philip's College (Australia) (NT), Moreton Bay College (QLD), Scotch College, Adelaide (SA), Scotch Oakburn College (TAS), Haileybury, Melbourne (VIC), and Wesley College, Perth (WA)
Seventh-day Adventist Central Coast Adventist School (NSW), Brisbane Adventist College (QLD), Prescott Schools (SA), Hilliard Christian School (TAS), and Nunawading Christian College (VIC)
Presbyterian Covenant College, Canberra (ACT), The Scots College (NSW), Brisbane Boys' College (QLD), Scotch College, Adelaide (SA), Scotch College, Melbourne (VIC), and Presbyterian Ladies' College, Perth (WA)
Baptists Redeemer Baptist School (NSW), Glasshouse Christian College (QLD), King's Baptist Grammar School (SA), Carey Baptist Grammar School (VIC), and Kennedy Baptist College (WA)
Non-denominational Christian schools Covenant Christian School, Canberra (ACT), The Pittwater House School (NSW), Brisbane Christian College (QLD), Wilderness School (SA), Calvin Christian School (TAS), Ruyton Girls' School (VIC), Australian Christian College – Darling Downs (WA) Westminster Confession of Faith, unaligned, Australian Christian Churches, Life Church Brisbane, and Christian Education Ministries via the Australian Christian Colleges
Islamic schools Malek Fahd Islamic School (NSW), Islamic College of Brisbane (QLD), Islamic College of South Australia (SA), The Islamic Schools of Victoria (VIC), and Australian Islamic College (WA)
Jewish schools Emanuel School, Australia (NSW), Beth Rivkah Ladies College (VIC), and Carmel School, Perth (WA) Reform Judaism, Chabad Orthodoxy, and Modern Orthodoxy
Montessori schools Sydney Montessori School (NSW), Queensland Independent College (QLD), Melbourne Montessori School (VIC), Perth Montessori School (WA)
Steiner schools Orana Steiner School (ACT), Glenaeon Rudolf Steiner School (NSW), Mount Barker Waldorf School (SA), Tarremah Steiner School (TAS), Sophia Mundi Steiner School (VIC)
Schools constituted under specific
Acts of Parliament
(such as grammar schools in some states)
Sydney Grammar School (NSW) and Brisbane Grammar School (QLD)
Indigenous community schools Kalgoorlie-Boulder Community High School and Karalundi Aboriginal Education Community (WA)
Schools that specialise in meeting the needs of students with disabilities Mater Dei Special School (NSW) and Western Autistic School (VIC)
Schools that cater for students at severe educational risk due to a range of social/emotional/behavioural and other risk factors

Specialist organisational structures edit

Special schools edit

A special school is a school catering for students who have special educational needs due to learning difficulties, physical disabilities, developmental disabilities or social/emotional disturbance, or who are in custody, on remand or in hospital.[124] Special schools may be specifically designed, staffed and resourced to provide appropriate special education for children with additional needs. Students attending special schools generally do not attend any classes in mainstream schools. The schools cater for students with mild, moderate and profound intellectual disabilities, deaf and hard of hearing students, students with Autism and students with a physical disability.[125] Class sizes at specialist schools are smaller than at mainstream schools, and there is a much lower ratio of teaching and support staff to students. Some specialist schools also have therapists on staff. Specialist schools generally already have an accessible environment and curriculum for their student population; this may mean that there are limited subjects on offer.[125]

Selective schools edit

A selective school is a government school that enrols students based on some sort of selection criteria, usually academic. The term may have different connotations in different systems and is the opposite of an open or comprehensive school, which accepts all students, regardless of aptitude.

In New South Wales, student placement in fully and partially selective high schools is highly competitive, with approximately 3,600 places offered to the 15,000 students who sit the Selective High School Test. As of 2019 there were 47 fully or partially selective government high schools, including 17 fully selective high schools (some of which are co-educational and others provide a single-sex educational environment); 25 partially selective high schools (high schools with both selective and comprehensive classes); four selective agricultural high schools; and one virtual selective high school.[126] Of the 47 schools, 34 are located in greater metropolitan Sydney. Of the government selective high schools in New South Wales, James Ruse Agricultural High School is renowned for its academic achievements and competitiveness, as well as a near-perfect record of all students gaining university admission, especially in medicine, law and science. The school has outperformed every high school in New South Wales in the past 20 years in public university entrance examinations.[127][128][129][130]

In Victoria, selective government high schools select all of their students based on an entrance examination. As of 2011, there were four selective schools: Melbourne High School, Mac.Robertson Girls' High School, Nossal High School and Suzanne Cory High School.[131] In addition, there are three special schools namely Victorian College of the Arts Secondary School, John Monash Science School and Elizabeth Blackburn School of Sciences which cater to students opting for focused education in arts and science respectively.[citation needed]

In Queensland, there are four selective entry high schools. Brisbane State High School, established in 1921, is partially selective; and the three Queensland Academies which are fully selective and were formed during 2007 and 2008. All require entry based on academic entry tests, NAPLAN results, primary school grades, interviews and other considerations.[132]

In Western Australia, selective secondary education (officially named Gifted and Talented Education (GATE)[133]) is operated by the Western Australian Department of Education through the Gifted and Talented Selective Entrance Programs for Year 7, and subject to limited placement availability for year-levels upward to Year 11.[134] All applicants are required to sit the Academic Selective Entrance Test and possibly complete combined interviews, auditions and/or workshops depending on the program(s) applied for.[135] The programs are categorised into three strands: academic, language, and arts.[136] Eighteen government schools participate in the Gifted and Talented Programs, each specialising in one of the strands.[137] All participating schools are partially selective and partially local intake, except for Perth Modern School which is fully selective.[138]

Specialist schools edit

Schools that operate specialist education programs exist in all Australian states and territories. These schools are typically associated with the arts or elite sports programs. In South Australia, specialist schools cover the arts, gifted and talented programs, languages, agricultural schools, science, technology, engineering and mathematics, advanced technology project schools, sports schools, and trade training centres.[139] In Victoria, examples of specialist government schools include those focused on science and maths (John Monash Science School), performing arts (Victorian College of the Arts Secondary School), sports (Maribyrnong Secondary College), and leadership and enterprise (The Alpine School).[140] An alternative model is those sporting organisations that deliver specialist programs to a narrow selection of schools, such as Cricket Australia's Specialist School Program to three Western Australian schools.[141]

International schools edit

In Australia, international schools promote international education and may be operated by the government of the country of origin, the government of the state or territory in which the school is located, or be operated as an independent school. International schools include those schools that have received international accreditation such as from the Council of International Schools, the International Baccalaureate Organization, or the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, or other similar organisations.[142] As of 2019, approximately 80 Australian schools meet that definition, with the vast majority being schools that offered one or more of the International Baccalaureate programmes. Other schools are affiliated with specific cultures or languages, most notably French (e.g. Telopea Park School (ACT), Lycée Condorcet (NSW), Auburn High School (VIC)), German (e.g. German International School Sydney (NSW) and Deutsche Schule Melbourne (VIC)), or Japanese (e.g. Sydney Japanese International School (NSW), The Japanese School of Melbourne (VIC) and The Japanese School in Perth (WA)) schools, including Japanese supplementary weekend schools; or may generally be international in their outlook, including the International Grammar School (NSW) or the International School of Western Australia (WA).

Mixed-sex and single-sex education edit

In Australia, both government and non-government schools operate co-educational and single-sex educational environments for students. The overwhelming number of schools are co-educational, with a small proportion of government schools operating single-sex schools, sometimes with a separate boys' and girls' school in the same suburb. All government single-sex schools are secondary schools. Examples of adjacent single-sex government secondary schools include Asquith Boys' and Asquith Girls', Canterbury Boys' and Canterbury Girls', North Sydney Boys' and North Sydney Girls', Randwick Boys' and Randwick Girls', and Sydney Boys' and Sydney Girls' (all in Sydney); and Melbourne High and Mac.Robertson Girls' (in Melbourne).

The majority of single-sex schools in Australia are non-government schools, heavily weighted towards independent schools, some of which are Catholic independent schools. Some Catholic systemic schools are also single-sex schools; however, like government schools, the overwhelming majority are co-educational schools.

Day and boarding schools edit

In Australia, both government and non-government schools operate day and boarding schools. As of 2019, of the 10,584 registered schools operating in Australia, approximately 250 schools (or less than 2.5 per cent) were boarding schools.[143] Boarding schools can provide a valuable platform for students to achieve their potential academically along with providing support and guidance with their psychological, social, emotional and spiritual development.[144] Some Australian schools offer gender-specific (boys' [approximately 21 per cent] or girls' [approximately 28 per cent]) and co-educational boarding schools (51 per cent);[143] with multi-modal options, such as full-time boarding and part-time boarding (for example, going home on the weekends) offered by some schools.[145] Some specialist education schools, such as The Australian Ballet School, offer boarding facilities.[146] The largest peak body for boarding schools in Australia, the Australian Boarding Schools Association, claimed that, in 2017, there were 22,815 students in boarding schools covered by the association, an increase from 19,870 in 2014.[143]

Qualifications edit

Within the context of the Australian Qualifications Framework, each state and territory is responsible for issuing certificates and/or qualifications to secondary students, collectively referred to as the Senior Secondary Certificate of Education. The following table serves as a summary of the qualifications issued by each state or territory:

Qualifications by state/territory
State/territory Did not matriculate from Year 12 Matriculated from Year 12 Trade-based secondary qualifications[147] Notes
ACT Statement of Achievement ACT Senior Secondary Certificate and Record of Achievement (ACT SSC) VET Certificates and Statements of Attainment [148]
NSW Record of School Achievement NSW Higher School Certificate (HSC) [149]
NT NT Certificate of Education and Training (NTCET)[note d] [150]
QLD Queensland Certificate of Individual Achievement (QCIA) Queensland Certificate of Education (QCE) [151]
SA South Australian Certificate of Education (SACE)[note d] [152][153]
TAS Tasmanian Qualifications Certificate (TQC) Tasmanian Certificate of Education (TCE) [154][155]
VIC Victorian Certificate of Education (VCE) Victorian Certificate of Applied Learning (VCAL) 2002-2023

VCE Vocational Major 2023-

[156][157]
WA Western Australian Statement of Student Achievement (WASSA) Western Australian Certificate of Education (WACE) [158][159]

As an alternative form (or as an addition to) the government-endorsed certification path, students, by approval, may elect to receive certification under the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme.

Basic skills tests edit

The National Assessment Program – Literacy and Numeracy (abbreviated as NAPLAN) is a series of tests focused on basic skills that are administered annually to Australian students. These standardised tests assess students' reading, writing, language (spelling, grammar and punctuation) and numeracy. Introduced in 2008, NAPLAN is administered by the Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA) and is overseen by the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) Education Council.[160] The tests are designed to determine if Australian students are achieving outcomes.[161] The tests are designed to be carried out on the same days across Australia in any given year. Parents can decide whether their children take the test or not.[162] The vast majority of Year 3, 5, 7 and 9 students participate. Although for year three students, they have to pass with a 70% mark to progress to Year 4. One of the aims of NAPLAN is to prepare young children for competitive examinations.[163]

Provider of school education to international students edit

In Australia, a student is considered as an international student if he/she studies at an approved educational institution and he/she is not an Australian citizen, Australian permanent resident, New Zealand citizen, or a holder of an Australian permanent resident humanitarian visa.[164] Under the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 (Cth), the Australian Government regulates the delivery of school and tertiary education to international students who are granted a student visa to study in Australia. The government maintains the Commonwealth Register of Institutions and Courses for Overseas Students (CRICOS) and, as of 2018, there were 396 school providers with an overall approved capacity of 88,285 students.[165]: 6  While Australia as an education destination showed strong and sustained growth over many years, as of June 2019, school-based education fell by three per cent for the year, and represented approximately three per cent of all international student enrolments; with tertiary education, vocational education and training, and English Language Intensive Courses for Overseas Students (ELICOS)[166] comprised 93 per cent of all enrolments and recorded 21 per cent annual growth.[167]

Issues in Australian school education edit

Government education policy edit

Despite a substantial increase in government spending per student over ten years (after correcting for inflation), the proportion of students who are proficient in maths, reading and science has actually declined over that same period. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and the Menzies Research Centre have both concluded that increasing school funding above a basic level has little effect on student proficiency. Instead, they both recommend greater autonomy. That is, the states should merely monitor the performance of the schools. Individual principals should have full authority and responsibility for ensuring student proficiency in core areas.[168]

In 2010 the Gillard government commissioned David Gonski to the chair a committee to review funding of Australian schools. Entitled the Gonski Report, through the Council of Australian Governments the Gillard government sought to implement the National Education Reform Agreement that would deliver an A$9.4 billion school funding plan. Despite some states and territories becoming parties to the Agreement,[169][170][171] the plan was shelved following the 2013 federal election.[172][173] The Turnbull government commissioned Gonski in 2017 to chair the independent Review to Achieve Educational Excellence in Australian Schools, commonly called Gonski 2.0.[174] The government published the report on 30 April 2018.[175] Following negotiation, bilateral agreements between the Commonwealth of Australia with each state and territory commenced on 1 January 2019, with the exception of Victoria, whose bilateral agreement commenced on 1 February 2019. The funding agreements provide states with funding for government schools (20 percent) and non-government schools (80 percent) taking into consideration annual changes in enrolment numbers, indexation and student or school characteristics. A National School Resourcing Board was charged with the responsibility of independently reviewing each state's compliance with the funding agreement(s).[50]

Australian students placed 16th in the world in reading, 29th in maths and 17th in science in the 2018 PISA study by the OCED.[18][176]

Indigenous primary and secondary education edit

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children are at a significant disadvantage when compared to non-Indigenous Australians across a number of key school educational measures.[177] In 2008, the Council of Australian Governments announced seven[178][note e] "closing the gap" targets, of which four related to education, namely:[179]

  1. participation in early childhood education: with the goal of 95 per cent of all Indigenous four-year-olds enrolled in early childhood education by 2025;[note f]
  2. reading, writing and numeracy levels: with the goal to halve the gap for Indigenous students in reading, writing and numeracy within a decade (by 2018);
  3. Year 12 attainment: with the goal to halve the gap for Indigenous 20–24 year olds in year 12 or equivalent attainment rates (by 2020); and
  4. school attendance: with the aim to close the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous school attendance within five years (by 2018).[note c]

As of 2018, the target results were:[180]

National Indigenous Reform Agreement:
Performance data (Closing the gap)
Measure 2017-18 results
Indigenous Non-
Indigenous
The proportion of children who are enrolled in
(and attending, where possible to measure) a pre-school
program in state-specific year before formal schooling
95.0% 89.9%
Percentage of students at or above the minimum standard
in reading, writing and numeracy for Years 3, 5, 7 & 9
unavailable[note g]
Attainment of Year 12 or equivalent Major cities 73.8% 90.9%
Inner regional 65.1% 83.0%
Outer regional 64.5% 82.1%
Remote 51.0% 82.2%
Very remote 42.6% 84.2%
Attendance rates - Year 1 to Year 10 82.3% 92.5%

Bilingual education in schools edit

Bilingual education in Australia may be divided into three different types, or target audiences, each having somewhat different purposes: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples; immigrant (CALD) groups; and English speakers looking to add another language to their education. The first two are interested in language maintenance and language revitalisation for ensuing generations.[181]

The first recorded government support for bilingual education came under the Menzies government in 1950, when the first government schools for Aboriginal students were opened at four sites in the Northern Territory (NT), where instruction "should include English Language, Native Language (where appropriate)". Policies and practices varied in the following years, with the first five pilot programs introduced in 1973 after the Whitlam government came to power and brought in new federal policies.[182]

In the Northern Territory (the jurisdiction with the greatest proportion of Indigenous people, and many remote communities), bilingual programs for Indigenous students begun with Federal Government support in the early 1970s. Yirrkala Community School was identified as the first to undergo bilingual accreditation in 1980, and bilingual students outperformed the non-bilingual students. However, by December 1998 the Northern Territory Government had announced its decision to shift A$3 million away from the 29 bilingual programs to a Territory-wide program teaching English as a second language. Within 12 months though the government had softened its position, after people took to the streets in protest.[182][183]

From around 2000, most bilingual programs were allowed to continue under the names "two-way education",[184] or "both-ways" learning.[185][186] Other programs included language maintenance and language revitalisation in remote schools across the NT.

Then on 24 August 2005, the Minister for Employment, Education and Training announced that the government would be "revitalising bi-lingual education" at 15 Community Education Centres: Alekarenge, Angurugu, Borroloola, Gapuwiyak, Gunbalanya, Kalkaringi, Lajamanu, Maningrida, Milingimbi, Ramingining, Ngukurr, Shepherdson College, Numbulwar, Yirrkala and Yuendumu. This revitalisation is conceived as part of an effort aimed at "providing effective education from pre-school through to senior secondary at each of the Territory's 15 Community Education Centres".[182]

However, in October 2008, in the first year of NAPLAN testing,[183] despite the NT Indigenous Education Strategic Plan 2006-2009 supporting bilingual instruction, it was mandated by the NT Government that English should be the language of instruction in all NT schools for the first four hours of the school day. After legal challenges, an AIATSIS Symposium on Bilingual Education in 2009, media coverage and much debate, the policy was replaced by a new policy: "Literacy for Both Worlds", but that was soon withdrawn again. There was intervention by the Australian Human Rights Commission, and in 2012 the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander affairs issued a report which included the recommendation that: "Indigenous language education should be introduced to all schools with Aboriginal students, and indigenous languages included as an official Closing the Gap measure".[182]

Prominent schools involved in bilingual education programs in the NT include Yirrkala Community Education Centre (CEC) and Shepherdson College on Galiwin'ku.[182] Yirrkala School and its sister school ignored the government directive, and has continued to teach its "both ways" methodology. The students' first language, Yolngu Matha, is taught alongside English. The method has proven effective against reducing the drop-out rate, and in 2020 eight students were the first in their community to graduate year 12 with scores enabling them to attend university. Yirrkala School and its sister school, Laynhapuy Homelands School, are now being looked to as models for learning in remote traditional communities.[187] Areyonga School, in Areyonga, was still using both-ways education in August 2023, 50 years since it had begun there, teaching in Pitjantjatjara language and culture.[183]

Religious education in government schools edit

Constitutionally, Australia is a secular country.[188] Section 116 of Chapter V. The States in the Australian Constitution reads:

The Commonwealth shall not make any law for establishing any religion, or for imposing any religious observance, or for prohibiting the free exercise of any religion, and no religious test shall be required as a qualification for any office or public trust under the Commonwealth.[189]

Nevertheless, Australia maintains one of the highest concentrations of religious schools, when compared with other OECD countries. Historically, the teaching of religion in Australian government schools has been a contentious issue[188] and was a motivator for the foundation of the government schooling system.

While the National School Chaplaincy Programme provides an overarching framework based on pastoral care, not religious instruction,[190][191] the practices and policies of religious instruction in Australian schools vary significantly from state to state. In New South Wales, the Special Religious Education classes are held in the government school sector that enable students to learn about the beliefs, practices, values and morals of a chosen religion.[192][193] In Queensland, religious organisations may apply to school principals and, if approved, deliver approved religious instruction programs in government schools.[194] In Victoria, legislation prescribes that government schools must not promote any particular religious practice, denomination or sect, and must be open to adherents of any philosophy, religion or faith. However, individual school principals may permit approved organisations to deliver non-compulsory special religious instruction classes of no more than 30 minutes per week per student, during lunchtime or in the hour before or after usual school hours.[195] In Western Australia, both special religious education (not part of the general curriculum)[196] and general religious education (as part of the general curriculum)[197] are offered in government schools.

School violence edit

In July 2009, the Queensland Minister for Education said that the rising levels of violence in schools in the state were "totally unacceptable" and that not enough had been done to combat violent behaviour. In Queensland, 55,000 school students were suspended in 2008, nearly a third of which were for "physical misconduct".[198]

In South Australia, 175 violent attacks against students or staff were recorded in 2008.[199] Students were responsible for deliberately causing 3,000 injuries reported by teachers over two years from 2008 to 2009.[200]

ESOS Act edit

The Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 (or ESOS Act) sets out the legal framework governing delivery of education to international students visiting Australia on a student visa.[201]

Tertiary education edit

 
People attending a tertiary institution as a percentage of the local population at the 2011 census, geographically subdivided by statistical local area

Tertiary education (or higher education) in Australia is primarily study at university or a registered training organisation[9] studying Diploma or above in order to receive a qualification or further skills and training.[202] A higher education provider is a body that is established or recognised by or under the law of the Australian Government, a State, the Australian Capital Territory or the Northern Territory.[203] VET providers, both public and private are registered by state and territory governments.

There are 42 universities in Australia: 37 public universities, 3 private universities and 2 international private universities.[204] As of 2015, the largest university in Australia was Monash University in Melbourne: with five campuses and 75,000 students.[205]

There are non-self-accrediting higher education providers accredited by state and territory authorities, numbering more than 132 as listed on state and territory registers. These include several that are registered in more than one state and territory.

All students doing nationally recognised training need to have a Unique Student Identifier (USI).[206]

International tertiary students edit

Australia has the highest ratio of international students per head of population in the world by a large margin, with 812,000 international students enrolled in the nation's universities and vocational institutions in 2019.[16][17] Accordingly, in 2019, international students represented on average 26.7% of the student bodies of Australian universities. International education, therefore, represents one of the country's largest exports and has a pronounced influence on the country's demographics, with a significant proportion of international students remaining in Australia after graduation on various skill and employment visas.[207] The Australian onshore international education sector is predicted to rise to 940,000 by 2025. The biggest source markets for onshore international learner enrolments in 2025 are expected to be China, India, Vietnam, Thailand, Nepal, Malaysia, Brazil and South Korea. According to a 2016 report by Deloitte Access Economics for the Australian Trade and Investment Commission, higher education and Vocational Education and Training (VET) were projected to be the fastest-growing sectors in onshore international education by 2025.[208] Australian Government is also planning to add another 1.46 billion AUD according to Modern Manufacturing Strategy, which predicts a high jump in job growth and migration of people.

Rankings edit

36 Australian tertiary educational institutions were listed in the QS World University Rankings for 2021;[209] and 37 institutions were listed in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings in the same year.[210] As of 2020, 34 Australian universities were listed in China's Academic Ranking of World Universities ranking, with The University of Melbourne achieving the highest global ranking, at 35th.[211] In the same year, according to the U.S. News & World Report Best Global Universities Rankings, 38 Australian universities were ranked, ranging from the University of Melbourne, at 25th place, to Bond University, at 1133th place.[212]

The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) evaluation in 2006 ranked the Australian education system as sixth for reading, eighth for science and thirteenth for mathematics, on a worldwide scale including 56 countries.[213] The PISA evaluation in 2009 ranked the Australian education system as sixth for reading, seventh for science and ninth for mathematics, an improvement relative to the 2006 rankings.[214] In 2012, education firm Pearson ranked Australian education as thirteenth in the world.[215]

The Education Index, published with the UN's Human Development Index in 2018, based on data from 2017, listed Australia as 0.929, the second-highest in the world.[22]

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Campbell, Craig; Proctor, Helen (2014). A history of Australian schooling. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-74237-182-5.
  • Arthur Patchett Martin (1889). "The State Schoolmaster". Australia and the Empire: 157–187. Wikidata Q107340726.
  • Passow, A. Harry et al. The National Case Study: An Empirical Comparative Study of Twenty-One Educational Systems. (1976) online

External links edit

  • "School education: a quick guide to key internet links". Research Papers: 2018-2019. Parliament of Australia. 21 August 2018.
  • Australian Qualifications Framework website
  • Australia: Education GPS  – published by the OECD
  • (PDF). Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade: Diplomatic Academy. Australian Government. 2018. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 June 2018. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  • Australian Bureau of Statistics – Education

education, australia, encompasses, sectors, early, childhood, education, preschool, primary, education, primary, schools, followed, secondary, education, high, schools, finally, tertiary, education, which, includes, higher, education, universities, other, high. Education in Australia encompasses the sectors of early childhood education 8 preschool and primary education primary schools followed by secondary education high schools and finally tertiary education which includes higher education universities and other higher education providers and vocational education registered training organisations 9 Regulation and funding of education is primarily the responsibility of the States and territories 2 however the Australian Government also plays a funding role 10 Education in AustraliaAustralian GovernmentMinister for EducationJason ClareNational education budget 2015 BudgetA 111 8 billion 1 5 9 percent of GDPGeneral detailsPrimary languagesEnglishSystem typeState 2 Established compulsory education1830s 3 1870s 3 Literacy 2003 Total99 4 Male99 4 Female99 4 Enrollment 2008 Total20 4 of population 5 6 Primary1 9 million 5 Secondary1 4 million 5 Post secondary1 million 7 Education in Australia is compulsory between the ages of four five or six 11 and fifteen sixteen or seventeen depending on the state or territory and the date of birth 12 For primary and secondary education government schools educate approximately 60 per cent of Australian students with approximately 40 per cent in non government schools 5 At the tertiary level the majority of Australia s universities are public and student fees are subsidised through a student loan program where payment becomes due when debtors reach a certain income level Underpinned by the Australian Qualifications Framework implemented in 1995 Australia has adopted a national system of qualifications encompassing higher education vocational education and training VET and school based education 13 For primary and secondary schools a national Australian Curriculum has been progressively developed and implemented since 2010 14 Australia is a leading global provider of education to international students and in 2012 was ranked as the third largest provider of international education after the United States and the United Kingdom 15 Australia has the highest ratio of international students per head of population in the world by a large margin with 812 000 international students enrolled in the nation s universities and vocational institutions in 2019 16 17 However Australian students placed 16th in the world in reading 29th in maths and 17th in science in the 2018 PISA study by the OCED This continues a sharp decline in educational standards 18 19 20 21 The Education Index published with the UN s Human Development Index in 2018 based on data from 2017 listed Australia as 0 929 the second highest in the world 22 In 1966 the Australian Government signed the Convention against Discrimination in Education which aimed to combat discrimination and racial segregation in the field of education The Australian education system has suffered from the years of minimisation of funding too often relying upon the full fee paying students from abroad across all levels of education to prop up the short falls created by funding cuts International full fee paying students from primary school right through to Australia s universities have shown a slow decline in education standards This is a result of decreased funding along with a stark rise in students from non english speaking backgrounds who s english language proficiency is a hindrance to their studies Given the large numbers of students in the primary and secondary school system in some areas of Australia especially the capital cities who s english language skills are below the requirements of the school level they attend a decrease in reading writing and English skills are being observed Class sizes have increased this coupled with the growing work load on teachers trying to accommodate ESL students in main stream classes has led to a lowering of outcomes for primary and secondary school children especially in areas of low socioeconomic groups where the highest proportion of new immigrants settle More resources must be made available to english speaking students in these areas to compensate for the class time spent accommodating ESL students There must also be more resources outside of mainstream classes made available to ESL students Contents 1 Regulation and funding 2 Preschool 3 Primary and secondary education 3 1 History of school education in Australia 3 2 Compulsory attendance requirements 3 3 Australian Curriculum 3 4 Types of schools 4 School years 4 1 Primary schools 4 2 Secondary schools 4 3 Middle schools 4 4 Combined and central schools 5 Organisational structures 5 1 Government schools 5 2 Non government schools 5 2 1 Catholic schools 5 2 2 Private schools 6 Specialist organisational structures 6 1 Special schools 6 2 Selective schools 6 3 Specialist schools 6 4 International schools 7 Mixed sex and single sex education 8 Day and boarding schools 8 1 Qualifications 8 1 1 Basic skills tests 8 2 Provider of school education to international students 8 3 Issues in Australian school education 8 3 1 Government education policy 8 3 2 Indigenous primary and secondary education 8 3 3 Bilingual education in schools 8 3 4 Religious education in government schools 8 3 5 School violence 8 3 6 ESOS Act 9 Tertiary education 9 1 International tertiary students 9 2 Rankings 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksRegulation and funding editThe regulation operation and funding of education is the responsibility of the states and territories 2 because the Australian Government does not have a specific constitutional power to pass laws with concerning education 23 However the federal government helps to fund non government schools 24 helps to fund public universities and subsidises tertiary education through a national student loan scheme 25 and regulates vocational education providers 26 Post compulsory education is regulated within the Australian Qualifications Framework a unified system of national qualifications in schools vocational education and training and the tertiary education sector The Australian Government s involvement in education has been the responsibility of several departments over the years note a with the Department of Education Skills and Employment being formed in 2020 The academic year in Australia varies between States and institutions however it generally runs from late January early February until early mid December for primary and secondary schools with slight variations in the inter term holidays 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 and TAFE colleges 35 36 37 and from late February until mid November for universities with seasonal holidays and breaks for each educational institute 38 Preschool editHistorically preschool and pre prep programmes in Australia were relatively unregulated and not compulsory 39 While still not mandatory for children to attend the Federal Government has had a focus since 2009 on encouraging families to enrol their children from around 4 years of age in a preschool or kindergarten that delivers quality early childhood education and care 40 Federal and state legislation now requires preschool services to implement and deliver programming based on the nationally approved Early Years Learning Framework 41 The first exposure many Australian children have to learn with others outside of traditional parenting is daycare or a parent run playgroup 42 This sort of activity is not generally considered schooling as preschool education is separate from primary school in all states and territories except Western Australia where pre school education is taught as part of the primary school system 43 and Victoria where the state framework the Victorian Early Years Learning and Development Framework VEYLDF covers children from birth to 8 years old is used by some schools over the national framework 44 In Queensland preschool programmes are often called Kindergarten or Pre Prep and are usually privately run but attract state government funding if run for at least 600 hours a year and delivered by a registered teacher 45 Preschools are usually run by the state and territory governments except in Victoria South Australia and New South Wales where they are more often run by local councils community groups or private organisations 43 Preschool is offered to three to five year olds attendance numbers vary widely between the states but 85 7 of children attended preschool the year before school 46 The year before a child is due to attend primary school is the main year for preschool education This year is far more commonly attended and may take the form of a few hours of activity during weekdays 47 Most states of Australia now fund government preschools to offer 15 hours per week 600 hours over a year for each enrolled child in the year before they commence formal schooling 48 Primary and secondary education edit nbsp People attending a primary school as a percentage of the local population at the 2011 census geographically subdivided by statistical local area nbsp People attending secondary school as a percentage of the local population at the 2011 census geographically subdivided by statistical local area10 584 registered schools were operating in Australia in 2019 of which 7 092 were government schools 49 As of 2019 government schools educated 65 4 of all students 50 In 2017 there were just under 282 000 teachers in Australian primary and secondary schools 2 Of the non government schools nearly two thirds were Catholic schools 51 The major part of government run schools costs is met by the relevant state or territory government 52 The Australian Government provides the majority of public funding for non government schools which is supplemented by states and territories 53 Non government schools both religious or secular typically charge compulsory tuition and other fees Government schools provide education without compulsory tuition fees although many government schools ask for payment of voluntary fees to defray particular expenses 54 Regardless of whether a school is government or non government it is regulated by the same curriculum standards framework The framework is administered by the Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority 55 Most schools require students to wear prescribed school uniforms 56 A school year in Australia starts in January and finishes in December History of school education in Australia edit This article is missing information about section Please expand the article to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page September 2019 The first formal education in Australia began when the European convicts and settlers began to build the first public infrastructure in the 19th century The first schools were either built by ex convicts or members of the Church 57 The oldest school in continuous operation in Australia is Newcastle East Public School founded in 1816 58 Beginning in approximately 1905 many children of the Stolen Generations were educated like white children with the aim of effectively assimilating them into the white community This was made illegal in 1969 59 60 Compulsory attendance requirements edit School education in Australia is compulsory between certain ages as specified by state or territory legislation Depending on the state or territory and date of birth of the child school is compulsory from the age of five to six to the age of fifteen to seventeen 12 In the ACT 61 NSW 62 the Northern Territory 63 Queensland 64 65 South Australia 66 67 Victoria 68 and Western Australia 69 70 children are legally required to attend school from the age of six years old until the minimum leaving age In Tasmania the compulsory school starting age is 5 years old 71 However most children commence the preliminary year of formal schooling in Pre Year 1 between four and a half and five and a half years of age 51 variously called kindergarten sometimes called Year K 72 73 74 reception 75 preparation also abbreviated as prep 76 77 78 and transition 79 As of 2010 update the national apparent retention rate ARR a measure of student engagement that provides an indicator of the success of education systems in keeping students in school beyond the minimum leaving age was 78 per cent for all full time students in Year 12 5 51 Australian Curriculum edit Main articles Australian Curriculum and Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority While state and territory governments are responsible for the regulation and delivery of school based education within their jurisdiction through the Council of Australian Governments the Commonwealth Government has since 2014 played an increasing role in the establishment of the Australian Curriculum that sets the expectations for what all young Australians should be taught regardless of where they live in Australia or their background The development of the Australian Curriculum is based on the principles of improving the quality equity and transparency of Australia s education system 80 The Australian Curriculum for pre Year 1 to Year 10 is made up of the following eight learning areas English Mathematics Science Humanities and Social Sciences The Arts Technologies Health and Physical Education as well as Languages 81 In the senior secondary Australian Curriculum for Year 11 and Year 12 fifteen senior secondary subjects across English Mathematics Science History and Geography were endorsed between 2012 and 2013 The Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority has mandated the achievement standards that describe the quality of learning including the depth of understanding the extent of knowledge and the sophistication of skill expected of students who have studied the content for each subject 82 Types of schools edit The types of schools in Australia fall broadly into two categories government schools being those schools operated by state or territory departments or agencies and non government schools being those schools that are not operated by government departments or agencies 51 Non government schools can be further classified based on self identification of the school s affiliation Non government schools are grouped for reporting as Catholic schools including Catholic affiliated independent schools 83 84 or independent other non government schools 51 78 Government schools receive funding from the relevant state or territory government Non government schools receive funding from the Australian Government and relevant state or territory government 51 and in most cases parents are required to make a co payment for their child s education 54 As of 2019 update across primary and secondary education approximately two thirds of all school students attended government schools with the remaining one third of students educated in non government schools 50 51 A small portion of students are legally home schooled particularly in rural areas 85 School years editPrimary schools edit See also Primary school Also sometimes called infants schools Australia adopts the UNESCO term of primary school 86 that generally covers a child s education from pre Year 1 and finish with Year 6 The duration of primary school years varies across each Australian state and territory with most adopting seven years except in South Australia where until 2022 87 students finish with Year 7 making the duration of primary school eight years 88 see Primary until they are 11 12 or 13 years of age Primary schools focus on developing essential literacy numeracy and social skills and provide foundational knowledge to children about the world around them 89 Secondary schools edit See also Secondary school Australia Secondary schools in Australia are also called high schools note b and colleges or junior intermediate or senior colleges Secondary schools vary across each Australian state and territory but they generally cover Year 7 to Year 10 compulsory period of education and senior secondary schools continue to Year 12 90 This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2019 Middle schools edit See also Middle school Australia In the majority of Australian states and territories middle schools are relatively uncommon Students progress from primary school to secondary school 91 As an alternative to the middle school model some secondary schools divided their grades into junior high school Years 7 8 9 and 10 and senior high school Years 11 and 12 Some have three levels junior Years 7 and 8 intermediate Years 9 and 10 and senior Years 11 and 12 In June 2006 the Northern Territory Government introduced a three tier system featuring middle schools for Year 7 to Year 9 approximate age 12 15 and high school for Year 10 to Year 12 approximate age 15 18 92 Combined and central schools edit See also Combined school and Central school In Australia combined schools are schools that have classes from both primary and secondary year levels 88 see Combined school These schools may be located in an urban regional or rural area and can be government or non government schools As of 2019 update there were approximately 500 Australian combined government schools 93 search Combined school and approximately 850 Australian combined non government schools 94 search Combined school Central schools are predominantly but not exclusively government schools located in a rural area that provides both primary and lower secondary education to students usually concluding at Year 10 As of 2019 update there were 62 Australian central schools and all except one were located in rural New South Wales 95 search Central school In Western Australia the term district high school is synonymous with central school Organisational structures editSchools are broadly categorised into government and non government schools The non government schools are further categorised into Catholic schools and independent schools As of 2018 update 65 7 of students were enrolled in government schools 19 7 in catholic schools and 14 6 in independent schools 96 Student enrolments by school affiliation Australia 2014 2018 96 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018Government 2 406 495 2 445 130 2 483 802 2 524 865 2 558 169Non government Catholic 765 539 757 749 767 050 766 870 765 735Independent 529 857 540 304 547 374 557 490 569 930Totals 3 694 101 3 750 973 3 798 226 3 849 225 3 893 834Government schools edit nbsp The Mac Robertson Girls High School a government school in Melbourne CBD pictured in 2007 nbsp Warwick High School a government school in Warwick Queensland pictured in 2007 nbsp Quairading District High School a government school in Quairading Western Australia pictured in 2018See also State school Australia Also called state schools or public schools government schools educate approximately two thirds of all school students in Australia 50 If a student elects to attend a government school they are required to attend a school within their local school district unless the student has dispensation to attend another school usually approved based on academic merit specialisation or other reasons such as a student disability Government schools are run by the respective state government agency 52 They offer free education however many government schools ask parents to pay a contribution fee and a materials and services charge 54 97 98 99 for stationery textbooks sports uniforms school camps and other schooling costs that are not covered under government funding In 2010 the additional cost for schooling was estimated to be on average 316 per year per child 100 101 Government schools may be further categorised into open or comprehensive schools selective special and specialist schools all defined below In 2009 the Western Australia government introduced Independent Public Schools to describe a government school that while a part of the state education system was granted a higher degree of decision making authority than a regular government school 102 A similar reform was introduced in Queensland and as of December 2018 250 government schools commenced as independent public schools in Queensland 103 In February 2014 the then Federal Education Minister Christopher Pyne announced a 70 million Independent Public Schools Initiative to support 1 500 Australian government schools to become more autonomous 104 Government hospital schools are located at some major hospitals and provide access to tuition for students who have extended stays in hospitals 105 106 107 108 Across Australia the Federal Department of Education sets the overall national policy and direction for education in Australia The following state and territory government departments are responsible for the administration of education within their respective jurisdictions Government educational authority by state territory State territory Government educational agency Other relevant authoritiesAustralian Capital Territory ACT Education Directorate ACT Board of Senior Secondary Studies 109 New South Wales NSW Department of Education NSW Education Standards AuthorityNorthern Territory NT Department of EducationQueensland QLD Department of Education Queensland Curriculum and Assessment AuthoritySouth Australia SA Department for Education SACE Board of South AustraliaTasmania Department for Education Children and Young People Office of Tasmanian Assessment Standards and CertificationVictoria VIC Department of Education Victorian Curriculum and Assessment AuthorityWestern Australia WA Department of Education School Curriculum and Standards AuthorityNon government schools edit Schools from the non government sector operate under the authority of state or territory governments but are not operated by government education departments Schools from the non government sector may operate as individual schools in small groups or as a system such as those coordinated by the Catholic Education Commission in each state and territory 88 see non government sector All non government schools in Australia receive funding from the Commonwealth government 110 Catholic schools edit nbsp St Mary s College Hobart pictured in 2014 The college is affiliated with the Presentation Sisters a religious institute of the Catholic Church Main article Catholic education in Australia The education system delivered by the Roman Catholic Church in Australia has grown from 18th century foundations to be the second biggest provider of school based education in Australia 83 As of 2018 update one in five Australian students attended Catholic schools 83 111 There are over 1 700 Catholic schools in Australia with more than 750 000 students enrolled employing almost 60 000 teachers 83 112 Administrative oversight of Catholic education providers varies depending on the origins ethos and purpose of each education provider Oversight of Catholic systemic schools may rest with a Catholic parish diocese or archdiocese 83 while religious institutes have oversight of Catholic independent schools 84 The National Catholic Education Commission NCEC established by the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference through the Bishops Commission for Catholic Education is tasked with maintaining liaison with the federal government and other key national education bodies and complements and supports the work of the state and territory Catholic education commissions 113 While some Catholic schools operate independently via religious institutes 84 the majority of Catholic schools called systemic schools 83 operate under the Canon Law jurisdiction of an ecclesiastical public juridic person such as a bishop 114 7 In practice the bishop assigns a Catholic Education Office CEO Catholic Education Commission Catholic Schools Offices or a similar body 114 4 with daily operational responsibility for the leadership efficient operation and management of the Catholic systemic schools which educate in parish primary and regional secondary schools in Australia These diocesan bodies are charged with the implementation and management of the policies of the diocese and the allocation and administration of the funds provided by the government and private sources to Catholic systemic schools as well as the financial responsibilities for the administration of salaries for staff members 115 Most Catholic schools 96 per cent are systemically funded meaning that the government funding they nominally attract is provided to the relevant state Catholic Education Commission for needs based distribution Sixty one Australian Catholic schools are non systemically funded independent schools and receive government grants directly 84 Private schools edit nbsp The chapel at Scotch College Melbourne a well known Australian private school that enrols students from early learning to Year 12Not to be confused with Independent Public Schools Private schools are non government schools that are not operated by government authority and have a system of governance that ensures their independent operation Such schools are typically operated by an independently elected school council or board of governors and range broadly in the type of school education provided and the socio economics of the school community served Some private schools are run by religious institutes others have no religious affiliation and are driven by a national philosophy such as international schools pedagogical philosophy such as Waldorf Steiner schools or specific needs such as special schools 116 As of 2018 update including private schools run by Catholic religious institutes of the 9 477 schools in Australia 1 140 schools 12 per cent are in the private sector In the same year private schools enrolled over 617 000 students or 16 per cent of the Australian student population 117 Private school fees can vary from under 100 per month 118 to 3 200 119 120 depending on the student s year level the school s size and the socioeconomics of the school community In late 2018 it was reported that the most expensive private schools such as the APS Schools the AGSV Schools in Melbourne the GPS Schools QGSSSA Schools in Brisbane and the NSW GPS Schools Combined Associated Schools and the ISA Schools in Sydney and New South Wales charge fees of up to 500 000 for the thirteen years of private school education 121 122 123 Australian private schools broadly fall into the following categories 117 Types of Australian private schools Broad description Examples of schoolsExample school s name Examples of religious institute s or religious affiliation s Schools affiliated withChristian denominations Anglican Canberra Grammar School ACT The King s School Parramatta NSW The Southport School QLD St Peter s College Adelaide SA The Hutchins School TAS Geelong Grammar VIC and St Hilda s Anglican School for Girls WA Catholic note c St Edmund s College Canberra ACT St John s College Darwin NT St Joseph s College Hunters Hill NSW Loreto College Coorparoo QLD Sacred Heart College Adelaide SA St Mary s College Hobart TAS Xavier College VIC and Trinity College Perth WA Christian Brothers Missionaries of the Sacred Heart Daughters of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Marist Brothers Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary Presentation Sisters Jesuits and Opus DeiGreek Orthodox St Spyridon College NSW and St George College South Australia SA Lutheran St Paul s College Walla Walla NSW Good Shepherd Lutheran School NT Trinity Lutheran College Queensland QLD Concordia College Adelaide SA Eastside Lutheran College TAS Lakeside College VIC Living Waters Lutheran College WA Uniting Church Newington College NSW St Philip s College Australia NT Moreton Bay College QLD Scotch College Adelaide SA Scotch Oakburn College TAS Haileybury Melbourne VIC and Wesley College Perth WA Seventh day Adventist Central Coast Adventist School NSW Brisbane Adventist College QLD Prescott Schools SA Hilliard Christian School TAS and Nunawading Christian College VIC Presbyterian Covenant College Canberra ACT The Scots College NSW Brisbane Boys College QLD Scotch College Adelaide SA Scotch College Melbourne VIC and Presbyterian Ladies College Perth WA Baptists Redeemer Baptist School NSW Glasshouse Christian College QLD King s Baptist Grammar School SA Carey Baptist Grammar School VIC and Kennedy Baptist College WA Non denominational Christian schools Covenant Christian School Canberra ACT The Pittwater House School NSW Brisbane Christian College QLD Wilderness School SA Calvin Christian School TAS Ruyton Girls School VIC Australian Christian College Darling Downs WA Westminster Confession of Faith unaligned Australian Christian Churches Life Church Brisbane and Christian Education Ministries via the Australian Christian CollegesIslamic schools Malek Fahd Islamic School NSW Islamic College of Brisbane QLD Islamic College of South Australia SA The Islamic Schools of Victoria VIC and Australian Islamic College WA Jewish schools Emanuel School Australia NSW Beth Rivkah Ladies College VIC and Carmel School Perth WA Reform Judaism Chabad Orthodoxy and Modern OrthodoxyMontessori schools Sydney Montessori School NSW Queensland Independent College QLD Melbourne Montessori School VIC Perth Montessori School WA Steiner schools Orana Steiner School ACT Glenaeon Rudolf Steiner School NSW Mount Barker Waldorf School SA Tarremah Steiner School TAS Sophia Mundi Steiner School VIC Schools constituted under specificActs of Parliament such as grammar schools in some states Sydney Grammar School NSW and Brisbane Grammar School QLD Indigenous community schools Kalgoorlie Boulder Community High School and Karalundi Aboriginal Education Community WA Schools that specialise in meeting the needs of students with disabilities Mater Dei Special School NSW and Western Autistic School VIC Schools that cater for students at severe educational risk due to a range of social emotional behavioural and other risk factorsSpecialist organisational structures editSpecial schools edit See also Special education Special schools A special school is a school catering for students who have special educational needs due to learning difficulties physical disabilities developmental disabilities or social emotional disturbance or who are in custody on remand or in hospital 124 Special schools may be specifically designed staffed and resourced to provide appropriate special education for children with additional needs Students attending special schools generally do not attend any classes in mainstream schools The schools cater for students with mild moderate and profound intellectual disabilities deaf and hard of hearing students students with Autism and students with a physical disability 125 Class sizes at specialist schools are smaller than at mainstream schools and there is a much lower ratio of teaching and support staff to students Some specialist schools also have therapists on staff Specialist schools generally already have an accessible environment and curriculum for their student population this may mean that there are limited subjects on offer 125 Selective schools edit See also Selective school A selective school is a government school that enrols students based on some sort of selection criteria usually academic The term may have different connotations in different systems and is the opposite of an open or comprehensive school which accepts all students regardless of aptitude In New South Wales student placement in fully and partially selective high schools is highly competitive with approximately 3 600 places offered to the 15 000 students who sit the Selective High School Test As of 2019 update there were 47 fully or partially selective government high schools including 17 fully selective high schools some of which are co educational and others provide a single sex educational environment 25 partially selective high schools high schools with both selective and comprehensive classes four selective agricultural high schools and one virtual selective high school 126 Of the 47 schools 34 are located in greater metropolitan Sydney Of the government selective high schools in New South Wales James Ruse Agricultural High School is renowned for its academic achievements and competitiveness as well as a near perfect record of all students gaining university admission especially in medicine law and science The school has outperformed every high school in New South Wales in the past 20 years in public university entrance examinations 127 128 129 130 In Victoria selective government high schools select all of their students based on an entrance examination As of 2011 there were four selective schools Melbourne High School Mac Robertson Girls High School Nossal High School and Suzanne Cory High School 131 In addition there are three special schools namely Victorian College of the Arts Secondary School John Monash Science School and Elizabeth Blackburn School of Sciences which cater to students opting for focused education in arts and science respectively citation needed In Queensland there are four selective entry high schools Brisbane State High School established in 1921 is partially selective and the three Queensland Academies which are fully selective and were formed during 2007 and 2008 All require entry based on academic entry tests NAPLAN results primary school grades interviews and other considerations 132 In Western Australia selective secondary education officially named Gifted and Talented Education GATE 133 is operated by the Western Australian Department of Education through the Gifted and Talented Selective Entrance Programs for Year 7 and subject to limited placement availability for year levels upward to Year 11 134 All applicants are required to sit the Academic Selective Entrance Test and possibly complete combined interviews auditions and or workshops depending on the program s applied for 135 The programs are categorised into three strands academic language and arts 136 Eighteen government schools participate in the Gifted and Talented Programs each specialising in one of the strands 137 All participating schools are partially selective and partially local intake except for Perth Modern School which is fully selective 138 Specialist schools edit Not to be confused with Special education Special schools See also Specialist school Schools that operate specialist education programs exist in all Australian states and territories These schools are typically associated with the arts or elite sports programs In South Australia specialist schools cover the arts gifted and talented programs languages agricultural schools science technology engineering and mathematics advanced technology project schools sports schools and trade training centres 139 In Victoria examples of specialist government schools include those focused on science and maths John Monash Science School performing arts Victorian College of the Arts Secondary School sports Maribyrnong Secondary College and leadership and enterprise The Alpine School 140 An alternative model is those sporting organisations that deliver specialist programs to a narrow selection of schools such as Cricket Australia s Specialist School Program to three Western Australian schools 141 International schools edit See also International school In Australia international schools promote international education and may be operated by the government of the country of origin the government of the state or territory in which the school is located or be operated as an independent school International schools include those schools that have received international accreditation such as from the Council of International Schools the International Baccalaureate Organization or the Western Association of Schools and Colleges or other similar organisations 142 As of 2019 update approximately 80 Australian schools meet that definition with the vast majority being schools that offered one or more of the International Baccalaureate programmes Other schools are affiliated with specific cultures or languages most notably French e g Telopea Park School ACT Lycee Condorcet NSW Auburn High School VIC German e g German International School Sydney NSW and Deutsche Schule Melbourne VIC or Japanese e g Sydney Japanese International School NSW The Japanese School of Melbourne VIC and The Japanese School in Perth WA schools including Japanese supplementary weekend schools or may generally be international in their outlook including the International Grammar School NSW or the International School of Western Australia WA Mixed sex and single sex education editIn Australia both government and non government schools operate co educational and single sex educational environments for students The overwhelming number of schools are co educational with a small proportion of government schools operating single sex schools sometimes with a separate boys and girls school in the same suburb All government single sex schools are secondary schools Examples of adjacent single sex government secondary schools include Asquith Boys and Asquith Girls Canterbury Boys and Canterbury Girls North Sydney Boys and North Sydney Girls Randwick Boys and Randwick Girls and Sydney Boys and Sydney Girls all in Sydney and Melbourne High and Mac Robertson Girls in Melbourne The majority of single sex schools in Australia are non government schools heavily weighted towards independent schools some of which are Catholic independent schools Some Catholic systemic schools are also single sex schools however like government schools the overwhelming majority are co educational schools Day and boarding schools editSee also List of boarding schools in Australia In Australia both government and non government schools operate day and boarding schools As of 2019 update of the 10 584 registered schools operating in Australia approximately 250 schools or less than 2 5 per cent were boarding schools 143 Boarding schools can provide a valuable platform for students to achieve their potential academically along with providing support and guidance with their psychological social emotional and spiritual development 144 Some Australian schools offer gender specific boys approximately 21 per cent or girls approximately 28 per cent and co educational boarding schools 51 per cent 143 with multi modal options such as full time boarding and part time boarding for example going home on the weekends offered by some schools 145 Some specialist education schools such as The Australian Ballet School offer boarding facilities 146 The largest peak body for boarding schools in Australia the Australian Boarding Schools Association claimed that in 2017 there were 22 815 students in boarding schools covered by the association an increase from 19 870 in 2014 143 Qualifications edit Within the context of the Australian Qualifications Framework each state and territory is responsible for issuing certificates and or qualifications to secondary students collectively referred to as the Senior Secondary Certificate of Education The following table serves as a summary of the qualifications issued by each state or territory Qualifications by state territory State territory Did not matriculate from Year 12 Matriculated from Year 12 Trade based secondary qualifications 147 NotesACT Statement of Achievement ACT Senior Secondary Certificate and Record of Achievement ACT SSC VET Certificates and Statements of Attainment 148 NSW Record of School Achievement NSW Higher School Certificate HSC 149 NT NT Certificate of Education and Training NTCET note d 150 QLD Queensland Certificate of Individual Achievement QCIA Queensland Certificate of Education QCE 151 SA South Australian Certificate of Education SACE note d 152 153 TAS Tasmanian Qualifications Certificate TQC Tasmanian Certificate of Education TCE 154 155 VIC Victorian Certificate of Education VCE Victorian Certificate of Applied Learning VCAL 2002 2023 VCE Vocational Major 2023 156 157 WA Western Australian Statement of Student Achievement WASSA Western Australian Certificate of Education WACE 158 159 As an alternative form or as an addition to the government endorsed certification path students by approval may elect to receive certification under the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme Basic skills tests edit Main article National Assessment Program Literacy and Numeracy The National Assessment Program Literacy and Numeracy abbreviated as NAPLAN is a series of tests focused on basic skills that are administered annually to Australian students These standardised tests assess students reading writing language spelling grammar and punctuation and numeracy Introduced in 2008 NAPLAN is administered by the Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority ACARA and is overseen by the Council of Australian Governments COAG Education Council 160 The tests are designed to determine if Australian students are achieving outcomes 161 The tests are designed to be carried out on the same days across Australia in any given year Parents can decide whether their children take the test or not 162 The vast majority of Year 3 5 7 and 9 students participate Although for year three students they have to pass with a 70 mark to progress to Year 4 One of the aims of NAPLAN is to prepare young children for competitive examinations 163 Provider of school education to international students edit Main article International students in Australia Not to be confused with International school In Australia a student is considered as an international student if he she studies at an approved educational institution and he she is not an Australian citizen Australian permanent resident New Zealand citizen or a holder of an Australian permanent resident humanitarian visa 164 Under the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 Cth the Australian Government regulates the delivery of school and tertiary education to international students who are granted a student visa to study in Australia The government maintains the Commonwealth Register of Institutions and Courses for Overseas Students CRICOS and as of 2018 there were 396 school providers with an overall approved capacity of 88 285 students 165 6 While Australia as an education destination showed strong and sustained growth over many years as of June 2019 school based education fell by three per cent for the year and represented approximately three per cent of all international student enrolments with tertiary education vocational education and training and English Language Intensive Courses for Overseas Students ELICOS 166 comprised 93 per cent of all enrolments and recorded 21 per cent annual growth 167 Issues in Australian school education edit Government education policy edit Despite a substantial increase in government spending per student over ten years after correcting for inflation the proportion of students who are proficient in maths reading and science has actually declined over that same period The Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development and the Menzies Research Centre have both concluded that increasing school funding above a basic level has little effect on student proficiency Instead they both recommend greater autonomy That is the states should merely monitor the performance of the schools Individual principals should have full authority and responsibility for ensuring student proficiency in core areas 168 In 2010 the Gillard government commissioned David Gonski to the chair a committee to review funding of Australian schools Entitled the Gonski Report through the Council of Australian Governments the Gillard government sought to implement the National Education Reform Agreement that would deliver an A 9 4 billion school funding plan Despite some states and territories becoming parties to the Agreement 169 170 171 the plan was shelved following the 2013 federal election 172 173 The Turnbull government commissioned Gonski in 2017 to chair the independent Review to Achieve Educational Excellence in Australian Schools commonly called Gonski 2 0 174 The government published the report on 30 April 2018 175 Following negotiation bilateral agreements between the Commonwealth of Australia with each state and territory commenced on 1 January 2019 with the exception of Victoria whose bilateral agreement commenced on 1 February 2019 The funding agreements provide states with funding for government schools 20 percent and non government schools 80 percent taking into consideration annual changes in enrolment numbers indexation and student or school characteristics A National School Resourcing Board was charged with the responsibility of independently reviewing each state s compliance with the funding agreement s 50 Australian students placed 16th in the world in reading 29th in maths and 17th in science in the 2018 PISA study by the OCED 18 176 Indigenous primary and secondary education edit Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children are at a significant disadvantage when compared to non Indigenous Australians across a number of key school educational measures 177 In 2008 the Council of Australian Governments announced seven 178 note e closing the gap targets of which four related to education namely 179 participation in early childhood education with the goal of 95 per cent of all Indigenous four year olds enrolled in early childhood education by 2025 note f reading writing and numeracy levels with the goal to halve the gap for Indigenous students in reading writing and numeracy within a decade by 2018 Year 12 attainment with the goal to halve the gap for Indigenous 20 24 year olds in year 12 or equivalent attainment rates by 2020 and school attendance with the aim to close the gap between Indigenous and non Indigenous school attendance within five years by 2018 note c As of 2018 update the target results were 180 National Indigenous Reform Agreement Performance data Closing the gap Measure 2017 18 resultsIndigenous Non IndigenousThe proportion of children who are enrolled in and attending where possible to measure a pre schoolprogram in state specific year before formal schooling 95 0 89 9 Percentage of students at or above the minimum standardin reading writing and numeracy for Years 3 5 7 amp 9 unavailable note g Attainment of Year 12 or equivalent Major cities 73 8 90 9 Inner regional 65 1 83 0 Outer regional 64 5 82 1 Remote 51 0 82 2 Very remote 42 6 84 2 Attendance rates Year 1 to Year 10 82 3 92 5 Bilingual education in schools edit Bilingual education in Australia may be divided into three different types or target audiences each having somewhat different purposes Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples immigrant CALD groups and English speakers looking to add another language to their education The first two are interested in language maintenance and language revitalisation for ensuing generations 181 The first recorded government support for bilingual education came under the Menzies government in 1950 when the first government schools for Aboriginal students were opened at four sites in the Northern Territory NT where instruction should include English Language Native Language where appropriate Policies and practices varied in the following years with the first five pilot programs introduced in 1973 after the Whitlam government came to power and brought in new federal policies 182 In the Northern Territory the jurisdiction with the greatest proportion of Indigenous people and many remote communities bilingual programs for Indigenous students begun with Federal Government support in the early 1970s Yirrkala Community School was identified as the first to undergo bilingual accreditation in 1980 and bilingual students outperformed the non bilingual students However by December 1998 the Northern Territory Government had announced its decision to shift A 3 million away from the 29 bilingual programs to a Territory wide program teaching English as a second language Within 12 months though the government had softened its position after people took to the streets in protest 182 183 From around 2000 most bilingual programs were allowed to continue under the names two way education 184 or both ways learning 185 186 Other programs included language maintenance and language revitalisation in remote schools across the NT Then on 24 August 2005 the Minister for Employment Education and Training announced that the government would be revitalising bi lingual education at 15 Community Education Centres Alekarenge Angurugu Borroloola Gapuwiyak Gunbalanya Kalkaringi Lajamanu Maningrida Milingimbi Ramingining Ngukurr Shepherdson College Numbulwar Yirrkala and Yuendumu This revitalisation is conceived as part of an effort aimed at providing effective education from pre school through to senior secondary at each of the Territory s 15 Community Education Centres 182 However in October 2008 in the first year of NAPLAN testing 183 despite the NT Indigenous Education Strategic Plan 2006 2009 supporting bilingual instruction it was mandated by the NT Government that English should be the language of instruction in all NT schools for the first four hours of the school day After legal challenges an AIATSIS Symposium on Bilingual Education in 2009 media coverage and much debate the policy was replaced by a new policy Literacy for Both Worlds but that was soon withdrawn again There was intervention by the Australian Human Rights Commission and in 2012 the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander affairs issued a report which included the recommendation that Indigenous language education should be introduced to all schools with Aboriginal students and indigenous languages included as an official Closing the Gap measure 182 Prominent schools involved in bilingual education programs in the NT include Yirrkala Community Education Centre CEC and Shepherdson College on Galiwin ku 182 Yirrkala School and its sister school ignored the government directive and has continued to teach its both ways methodology The students first language Yolngu Matha is taught alongside English The method has proven effective against reducing the drop out rate and in 2020 eight students were the first in their community to graduate year 12 with scores enabling them to attend university Yirrkala School and its sister school Laynhapuy Homelands School are now being looked to as models for learning in remote traditional communities 187 Areyonga School in Areyonga was still using both ways education in August 2023 50 years since it had begun there teaching in Pitjantjatjara language and culture 183 Religious education in government schools edit See also Freedom of religion in Australia Separation of church and state in Australia Council for Christian Education in Schools and National School Chaplaincy ProgrammeConstitutionally Australia is a secular country 188 Section 116 of Chapter V The States in the Australian Constitution reads The Commonwealth shall not make any law for establishing any religion or for imposing any religious observance or for prohibiting the free exercise of any religion and no religious test shall be required as a qualification for any office or public trust under the Commonwealth 189 Nevertheless Australia maintains one of the highest concentrations of religious schools when compared with other OECD countries Historically the teaching of religion in Australian government schools has been a contentious issue 188 and was a motivator for the foundation of the government schooling system While the National School Chaplaincy Programme provides an overarching framework based on pastoral care not religious instruction 190 191 the practices and policies of religious instruction in Australian schools vary significantly from state to state In New South Wales the Special Religious Education classes are held in the government school sector that enable students to learn about the beliefs practices values and morals of a chosen religion 192 193 In Queensland religious organisations may apply to school principals and if approved deliver approved religious instruction programs in government schools 194 In Victoria legislation prescribes that government schools must not promote any particular religious practice denomination or sect and must be open to adherents of any philosophy religion or faith However individual school principals may permit approved organisations to deliver non compulsory special religious instruction classes of no more than 30 minutes per week per student during lunchtime or in the hour before or after usual school hours 195 In Western Australia both special religious education not part of the general curriculum 196 and general religious education as part of the general curriculum 197 are offered in government schools School violence edit In July 2009 the Queensland Minister for Education said that the rising levels of violence in schools in the state were totally unacceptable and that not enough had been done to combat violent behaviour In Queensland 55 000 school students were suspended in 2008 nearly a third of which were for physical misconduct 198 In South Australia 175 violent attacks against students or staff were recorded in 2008 199 Students were responsible for deliberately causing 3 000 injuries reported by teachers over two years from 2008 to 2009 200 ESOS Act edit The Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 or ESOS Act sets out the legal framework governing delivery of education to international students visiting Australia on a student visa 201 Tertiary education edit nbsp People attending a tertiary institution as a percentage of the local population at the 2011 census geographically subdivided by statistical local areaMain article Tertiary education in Australia Further information List of universities in Australia Tertiary education or higher education in Australia is primarily study at university or a registered training organisation 9 studying Diploma or above in order to receive a qualification or further skills and training 202 A higher education provider is a body that is established or recognised by or under the law of the Australian Government a State the Australian Capital Territory or the Northern Territory 203 VET providers both public and private are registered by state and territory governments There are 42 universities in Australia 37 public universities 3 private universities and 2 international private universities 204 As of 2015 update the largest university in Australia was Monash University in Melbourne with five campuses and 75 000 students 205 There are non self accrediting higher education providers accredited by state and territory authorities numbering more than 132 as listed on state and territory registers These include several that are registered in more than one state and territory All students doing nationally recognised training need to have a Unique Student Identifier USI 206 International tertiary students edit Australia has the highest ratio of international students per head of population in the world by a large margin with 812 000 international students enrolled in the nation s universities and vocational institutions in 2019 16 17 Accordingly in 2019 international students represented on average 26 7 of the student bodies of Australian universities International education therefore represents one of the country s largest exports and has a pronounced influence on the country s demographics with a significant proportion of international students remaining in Australia after graduation on various skill and employment visas 207 The Australian onshore international education sector is predicted to rise to 940 000 by 2025 The biggest source markets for onshore international learner enrolments in 2025 are expected to be China India Vietnam Thailand Nepal Malaysia Brazil and South Korea According to a 2016 report by Deloitte Access Economics for the Australian Trade and Investment Commission higher education and Vocational Education and Training VET were projected to be the fastest growing sectors in onshore international education by 2025 208 Australian Government is also planning to add another 1 46 billion AUD according to Modern Manufacturing Strategy which predicts a high jump in job growth and migration of people Rankings edit 36 Australian tertiary educational institutions were listed in the QS World University Rankings for 2021 209 and 37 institutions were listed in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings in the same year 210 As of 2020 34 Australian universities were listed in China s Academic Ranking of World Universities ranking with The University of Melbourne achieving the highest global ranking at 35th 211 In the same year according to the U S News amp World Report Best Global Universities Rankings 38 Australian universities were ranked ranging from the University of Melbourne at 25th place to Bond University at 1133th place 212 The Programme for International Student Assessment PISA evaluation in 2006 ranked the Australian education system as sixth for reading eighth for science and thirteenth for mathematics on a worldwide scale including 56 countries 213 The PISA evaluation in 2009 ranked the Australian education system as sixth for reading seventh for science and ninth for mathematics an improvement relative to the 2006 rankings 214 In 2012 education firm Pearson ranked Australian education as thirteenth in the world 215 The Education Index published with the UN s Human Development Index in 2018 based on data from 2017 listed Australia as 0 929 the second highest in the world 22 See also edit nbsp Education portal nbsp Australia portal Australian Flexible Learning Framework Education in the Australian Capital Territory Education in New South Wales Education in South Australia Education in Tasmania Education in Victoria Education in Western Australia Gwyneth Dow History of state education in Queensland Homeschooling and distance education in Australia Lists of schools in Australia Music education in Australia Reconciliation education Safe Schools Coalition Australia Tertiary education in Australia Tertiary education fees in AustraliaNotes edit note a These include Department of Education Employment and Training DEET 1988 Department of Employment Education Training and Youth Affairs DEETYA 1996 Department of Education Training and Youth Affairs DETYA 1997 Department of Education Science and Training DEST 2001 Department of Education Employment and Workplace Relations DEEWR 2007 Department of Education Australia 2019 2020 2013 Department of Education and Training Australia 2014 note b In Western Australia the term district high school refers to schools that enrol students from Year K to Year 10 note c The schools listed here are Catholic schools that are independent and administered by a religious institute It does not include Catholic schools that are systemically administered by a diocese Catholic 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