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Data Point



The depth and diversity of languages in Sydney rivals the world's largest cities.

A tribute to the dead of World War I

Lest we forget: The World War One centenary wreath-laying ceremony at the Australian War Memorial.

CONRAD WALTERS World War 1, by some measures the deadliest of all conflicts, is still as relevant today 100 years after the beginning of the event.

Data of death: Remote NSW life expectancy as bad as North Korea's

Andrew Lewis, mayor of Bourke, is frustrated by the lack of healthcare services in western NSW.

Eryk Bagshaw, Conrad Walters The average person in remote western NSW can expect to live a shorter life than someone in North Korea, the latest Australian Bureau of Statistics data has revealed.

Comments 29

Deaths in custody hit 16-year high in NSW facilities

The family of Aboriginal father-of-four Mark Mason, who was shot dead in a police operation in November 2010, waited three years for the coroner to complete his investigation. Among the children left behind is his son Trent.

INGA TING Deaths in prison, police or immigration custody are at their highest level in a decade and a half, the latest figures from the NSW State Coroner show.

Best Melbourne Cup horses of all time

Makybe Diva

CONRAD WALTERS Sorry, Phar Lap. You're stuffed in Melbourne, and you wouldn't be a safe bet for this year's Cup.

Comments

Global biodiversity suffers as humanity lives beyond its means

Australia

Bridie Smith and Inga Ting Australia’s ecological footprint is the 13th-largest in the world - and is likely to get bigger following the repeal of the carbon tax, conservation group WWF has warned.

Australian Government investment in science reaches 30-year low

Australia's investment in research and development is below the OECD average.

Inga Ting and Nicky Phillips The Australian government's investment in research and development has dropped to its lowest level in 30 years, an analysis of government figures shows.

Comments 207

OECD figures show public benefits more than individuals from tertiary education

Government open to HECS interest rate negotiation (Thumbnail)

INGA TING The Australian public, not individuals, gains most from higher education but students shoulder most of the cost, according to international figures that undermine the government's claim that students should pay more because they benefit most.

Green Economy Index 2014: Australia ranked last for leadership

Thumbnail

INGA TING Australia has fallen sharply in international green economy rankings, coming last out of 60 countries for performance on political leadership and climate change, and 37th overall.

Comments 116

Australian women desert technology courses, as tertiary IT enrolments fall

Judith Gammie  has gone back to uni to study computer science and set up a group for women in IT on campus.

CRAIG BUTT Enrolments in tertiary information technology courses have been falling, as local female students recoil from the sector's masculine reputation.

Ms Dhu's death in custody shows little learnt

Heath Aston dinkus

INGA TING Ms Dhu's death has sparked community outrage. However, those familiar with this country's dismal record of deaths in custody will not be surprised by the disturbing similarities between Ms Dhu's death and many deaths before hers.

NSW's new crime capital: Moree

Crime against the person climbed 0.2 per cent in the past year, with crime against property increasing by 0.7 per cent.

RACHEL OLDING Country towns in northern NSW are in the midst of a ''tsunami'' of crime.

High price of alcohol drives demand for illegal drugs

Wine.

INGA TING The expense of alcohol is driving Australia's high rates of illicit drug use, health experts say, as new figures show Australia's combination of high levels of use and expensive illicit substances buck international trends.

Drawcards

Sydney's fastest growing suburbs

***AFR FIRST USE ONLY***
Generic housing at Bella Vista housing development, homes, mortgage, house, for sale, roof tops. Wednesday 24 May 2006 AFR 
Photo Louie Douvis

AFR 31-01-2014

TOBY JOHNSTONE Parramatta or Paddington? New data from the Domain Group charts the city's best and worst performers.

Comments 57

Sydney restaurants: Where we are happy to pay for fine dining

Guillaume in Paddington, which opens on Saturday.

Esther Han and Inga Ting Celebrated chef Guillaume Brahimi is set to open a new fine dining restaurant, as new figures show patrons of premium restaurants are spending more.

Options

Should you buy or rent?

Shane and Dinah Hearn were renting in Bondi but have now bought in Randwick.

Jacob Saulwick, Toby Johnstone, Michael Koziol Buy or rent? Ross Hoskins never gave the latter a try.

UN shelter in Gaza shelled, killing at least 15

A crater from a shell in the courtyard of the school.

Alexandra Zavis and Batsheva Sobelman Shelter in northern Gaza has been shelled, causing "multiple deaths and injuries," according to a spokesman for the UN refugee agency.

Behind the labels: who is really on the disability support pension and why

Blind

 

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Chris 
Harris 
Motoring 
writer 
Drive.com.au 

-- 
Level 
3, 655 Collins Street, Docklands VIC 3008 
T 
03 8667 3126 | M 0414 410 627 
chris.harris@theage.com.au | www.drive.com.au

Judith Ireland, Conrad Walters We dig into the much-criticised benefit.

Number of displaced people worldwide exceeds 50 million: UN report

A Syrian refugee carries boxes of aid at Al-Zaatri refugee camp in the Jordanian city of Mafraq, near the border with Syria December 31, 2013. REUTERS/Muhammad Hamed (JORDAN - Tags: POLITICS CIVIL UNREST CONFLICT SOCIETY)

Sarah Whyte and Inga Ting The number of refugees, asylum seekers and internally displaced people worldwide has exceeded 50 million for the first time since World War II, a United Nations report shows.

Dating scams leave victims broke and broken-hearted

Online dating

Esther Han and Inga Ting Dating and romance-related fraud netted $25.2 million last year.

Pensioners lose savings in government cash grab

money

Esther Han, Inga Ting The government has bagged an unprecedented $360 million from household bank accounts since a controversial change to unclaimed money laws.

Comments 144

Women being left behind in Queen's Birthday Honours

Australian Sex Discrimination Commissioner Elizabeth Broderick with Defence minister Stephen Smith and Chief of the Defence Force General David Hurley released the Broderick Review into the Treatment of Women in the Australian Defence Force Academy Audit Report and launched the Sexual Misconduct Prevention and Response Office (SeMPRO) in Canberra on Tuesday 23 July 2013. Photo: Andrew Meares

CONRAD WALTERS Female librarians and women working with the disabled, take a bow. Since 2001, you have received more Order of Australia honours than your male counterparts. That's 185 of you, compared with 145 men.

Post-Gonski fortune to private schools

Education
Photo Michele MOssop
Wednesday 30th September 2009
Mamre Anglican School, Erskine Park western Sydney
Generic education private school learning lunch childhood uniform teaching reading writing study homework classroom religious  SPECIAL 114943

ANNA PATTY Termination of schools funding under the Gonski model after four years will deliver an ''overpayment'' of $169 million a year to 163 wealthy independent schools in NSW, analysis shows.

The royal we

Young Monarchists

PETER MUNRO We are not amused ... well, certainly Republicans aren't, as support for the monarchy among Australia's youth soars. Peter Munro meets those young 'uns who proudly dips their lids to Lizzie, Wills and Kate.

Life outside jail proves fatal

Doing time getting out ex-con returning home prison prisoner sentence parole release released cartoon illustration society
SHD EXTRA WATERSTREET LIFE Illo by MICHAEL MUCCI

INGA TING A prison sentence - even after it has been served - can be a death sentence.

United States Correspondent

A slice of pizza and a one-way ticket to the big house: the three-strikes law

Pictures by Jeff Rayner/Coleman-Rayner.
Jerry Williams the man who was arrested and then sentenced to prison for 25-life for stealing a piece of pizza under the California 3 strikes rule has been released early after only serving a fraction of his time. He is photographed in Moreno Valley, CA 
TEL USA 001 310 474 4343
TEL USA 001 323 687 8025

NICK O'MALLEY The way Jerry Williams tells the story he was just mucking around with friends when some kids said he stole a slice of pizza. He ended up with a 25-to-life prison sentence under California's ''three strikes'' law.

Science

Icy trip to the core of climate change

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Nicky Phillips, Conrad Walters A puddle of water was not what Mark Curran expected to find when he arrived at the Australian Antarctic Division in Kingston to check the ice cores he helped drill in Antarctica over summer.

Asylum seekers' time in detention soars

Gillian Triggs

Inga Ting, Conrad Walters The average number of days in detention has risen every month for the past eight months.

International drug cartels target wealthy Australian market

AFP

Nick Ralston International drug cartels are increasingly targeting the Australian market due to a rise in demand and the price consumers are willing to pay, with latest figures showing drug seizures and arrests at record highs.

Doctors fail to wash hands before treating patients, study finds

Doctors are routinely failing to meet hygiene standards, a study has found.

AMY CORDEROY Doctors in Australia's biggest hospitals are routinely failing to wash their hands before touching patients, new figures show.

Children left untreated as hospital waiting times 'blowout'

Victorian chairman of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons, Robert Stunden, has described hospital delays as ‘‘appalling’’.

Kate Hagan, Craig Butt Victorian children are waiting too long for elective surgery with hundreds of patients listed for semi-urgent operations at the Royal Children's Hospital missing out on treatment within 90 days, new data shows.

Overlapping health system just helps to 'jump queue'

Sam Taylor and Jade

INGA TING Sam Taylor's children were just 6 and 14 when she was asked to make a choice no woman ever wants to make.

Drinkers in danger rate their usage as average: study

-

Amy Corderoy, Lucy Carroll Australians are in denial about their alcohol use, tens of thousands are potentially drinking at risky levels and those in the most danger are seemingly clueless they have a problem, the Global Drug Survey has found.

Food Authority inspections reveal worst-offending grocery stores

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Esther Han, Inga Ting Rodents, bugs, filth and expired food have caused nearly 300 supermarkets, greengrocers and delis to be slapped with fines over the past six years, data from the NSW Food Authority shows.

University census date arrives: One in five students quit by first year

19 yo, Olivia Stock student at Billy Blue College. 28th Friday March 2014. Photograph by James Brickwood. SHD NEWS 140328 		 	   		  


_I9A0537.jpg

HEATH GILMORE It is the great university purge. Nearly one in five domestic students will probably leave their studies by the end of their first year.

Story of farming a saga of boom or bust

Drought

CONRAD WALTERS Drought kicked Cameron Rowntree in the gut this week. Spurred by the costs of feeding his cattle, the fourth-generation Walgett farmer thinned his herd by selling stock.

Private insurance-based healthcare 'the most expensive', Commission of Audit told

Mistakes can routinely add $20,000 to patient care.

INGA TING Countries that rely strongly on private insurance to fund healthcare have more expensive health systems, the federal government's Commission of Audit has been told.

Freedom and control are why the rich really are charitable

Money.

INGA TING Among taxpayers who claim a deduction for their generosity, the proportion of money given away by low-income earners is 11 times higher than that of wealthy taxpayers.

Revealed: The women we failed

Comrie Cullen

Nick Ralston, Amy Corderoy, Inga Ting Three-quarters of women killed in NSW die at the hands of loved ones, a statistic that has led the NSW Police Commissioner to warn that domestic violence is one of the ''biggest issues modern society has to face''.

When food goes wrong

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Richard Cornish Salmonella poisoning has almost doubled in the past decade. Following a spate of local and international incidents, we investigate why this is happening.

Comments 27

Health system inefficiencies costing $3 billion a year, says expert

Stephen Duckett ,  Director, Health Program GRATTAN Institute	
Photo Pat Scala The Age
Friday the 13th of December 2013

DAN HARRISON Billions of taxpayers' dollars could be saved from the public health budget without reducing levels of service and care, according to a former head of the federal Health Department.

Sydney schools face queues as sell-off scheme backfires

School

JOSEPHINE TOVEY 'Get rich quick'' schemes to sell schools in Sydney's inner suburbs over the past 20 years have backfired, parents and public education advocates say, with many of the remaining schools now close to full and the state government exploring the need for an inner-city high school.

A fare cop: state loses $120m every year to passengers who don't pay

Fare evasion.

Jacob Saulwick, Alexandra Back Public transport fare evaders cost NSW about $120 million a year, according to the first detailed survey of Sydney's bus, rail and ferry passengers.

Winter Olympics

Winter Olympics: Delphi's Oracle never foresaw this

Olympic medals

Alex Nicholson Extreme sports have paved the way for Australia's hopes in the Winter Olympics.

Comments

Coalition wins money vote as $81m poured into its coffers

money

JONATHAN SWAN The Coalition appears to be vastly better off than Labor, with the Liberals and Nationals making about $26 million more than their political opponents last year.

NSW

Welcome to Sydney's new million-dollar suburbs

A for sale sign

TOBY JOHNSTONE It is the only club in Sydney where Point Piper residents rub shoulders with the nouveau-riche of Kenthurst, where Mosman meets Matraville and Burwood and Birchgrove are equal.

Love your guts: world 'hearts' Aussie offal

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ESTHER HAN Australians love steak, but our aversion to the bits left behind has made us one of the biggest purveyors of offal in the world.

EXCLUSIVE

Selective school fees five times higher than at other public schools

James Ruse Agricultural High School

Josephine Tovey, Inga Ting Parents with children in NSW selective schools pay voluntary fees on average five times the amount of those with children in comprehensive public schools, creating a stark inequality within the public school system, an analysis by Fairfax Media reveals.

Lifting alcohol prices won't stop binges: experts

Beeers

INGA TING Higher prices for alcohol will do little to curb high-intensity drinking because binge drinkers commonly drink little or nothing on some days so they can binge on the weekend, leading public health experts warn.

Steroid use soars among young men

body builder

Peter Munro Steroids have become the drug of choice for people who start injecting illicit substances, eclipsing methamphetamines and heroin in popularity among young men.

Australia's richest suburb: they're swimming in it

mosman

Matt Wade It has Taronga Zoo, Balmoral Beach and a higher annual income than several African nations. Mosman's postcode, 2088, has the largest combined taxable income in Australia - a handy $2.5 billion, the latest tax data shows.

Sydney gay capital but some are only homosexual couple in the village

Couples

Lucy Marks, Craig Butt, Caroline Zielinski Karen Di Stefano does not see her homosexuality as anything out of the ordinary. ''It doesn't define who I am,'' says Ms Di Stefano, who has lived with her partner Amanda Harris in Frenchs Forest for three years.

A new kind of neighbourly love in Airport West

Caroline Jemison and Fiona Campbell

Caroline Zielinski and Craig Butt Caroline Jemison says a trip to her local shopping centre often leaves her wondering if she and her partner Fiona Campbell are the only lesbians in Airport West.

Private health insurance: one in the hip pocket

Wallet

RACHEL BROWNE With premiums steadily rising, many people are cutting back their healthcare cover, writes Rachel Browne.

Revealed: the high cost of being charitable

MERC, NEWS, CAROLS  Pic taken 13th December of generic pic of ladies hand donating money to charity..  Pic Robert Peet, Story Kilmeny Adie SPECIALX 00045322

GENERIC

Rachel Browne, Michaela Whitbourn Almost half of donations to some popular charities are spent on fund-raising, prompting calls for more transparency as the Coalition prepares to abolish the body set up to regulate not-for-profit organisations.

HSC trends hark back to gender stereotypes of '50s

Girls in the 1950s

AMY MCNEILAGE Looking at trends in this year's HSC results, one could be forgiven for thinking the results were from the 1950s.

ATAR results: two years' hard work adds up to relative mystery

hsc

AMY MCNEILAGE Almost 55,000 of the state's school leavers will find out their ATAR on Thursday. But it is doubtful many, if any, will truly understand the intricacies of how it was calculated.

One year after Sandy Hook, Americans still up in arms

As the U.S. Senate takes up gun legislation in Washington, DC , Mike Acevedo puts a weapon on display at the National Armory gun store on April 11

NICK O'MALLEY One year after the Sandy Hook massacre, America is still fiercely divided over its gun laws.

Automotive

Holden: Numbers tell the story for the small fry of General Motors' ecosystem

A sign bearing the GM Holden Ltd. logo stands at the company's headquarters in Melbourne, Australia, on Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2013. General Motors Co.'s Holden unit, Australia's largest carmaker, said it would shutter production lines in 2017 after 69 years, joining Ford Motor Co. in exiting an economy struggling with high costs and a strong currency. Photographer: Carla Gottgens/Bloomberg

MARK HAWTHORNE The story of Holden and its demise needs to be viewed through a global lens if it's to be fully understood.

Sandy Hook massacre: Gun lobby targets Australia

Turmoil: Residents grieve following the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

NICK O'MALLEY Australia has again become a focus of the increasingly bitter debate over gun control in the United States.

Maths tutoring adds up for students: OECD study

Kumon tutoring centre.

AMY MCNEILAGE Many of the world's most mathematically gifted teenagers come from countries with the most lucrative tutoring industries.

University degrees worth billions to Australian wellbeing

Degrees

MATT WADE Sitting through lectures and tutorials may be worth more than you think: the wellbeing value of a university degree is nearly $1 million.

Wasted decade as indigenous health fails to show improvement

An Aboriginal man

INGA TING Indigenous health has not improved at all in many areas of Australia over the past decade, data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics on Wednesday showed.

Court verdicts: More found innocent if no jury involved

Simon Gittany

Michaela Whitbourn The man accused of murdering his fiancee by throwing her off the balcony of their Hyde Park apartment may have improved his chances of being found innocent by being tried without a jury.

COAG report: girls ahead at school but women lag in pay stakes

Boys and girls at school

JOSEPHINE TOVEY It is the "baffling contrast" in gender equality in Australia: girls generally outperform boys at school, and are more likely to hold a bachelor degree, but men continue to earn more than women in the workplace and overwhelmingly dominate leadership roles.

Our national journey to prosperity

Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke with wife, Hazel, at the Labor Party campaign launch and policy speech at the Sydney Opera House, 23 June 1987.
SMH Picture by RICK STEVENS
portrait, mid-shot, couple, Hazel Hawke, PM, politics, politician, ALP, waving, black and white, black & white, 1980s, eighties pms

MATT WADE Statistics charting progress across Australian election years tell an interesting story, writes Matt Wade

Alarm over child drinking, multiple liquor outlets

Drinking

AMY CORDEROY Children as young as 12 who live in areas saturated with liquor outlets are more likely to drink than their peers, researchers say.

Melbourne top for avoidable hospital visits

Hospital.

Dan Harrison Melburnians are being admitted to hospital at the highest rates in the nation for conditions that should not need hospital treatment.

Comments 17

How Australia eats: The ultimate pie chart

Why are we fatter than ever and less capable of preparing food for ourselves?

INGA TING We've never been more preoccupied with what, where and how to eat, so why are we fatter than ever and less capable of preparing food for ourselves? Here are the facts and figures.

Comments 18

Home truths

Auction

MATT WADE As Sydney house prices break records, economists warn that $1 million suburbs are the new normal.

200 schools worse off in new scheme

The principal Peter Ezzy of Plumpton High with students Christy Velasco who is in year 10 and her brother
Joma who is in year 8.

JOSEPHINE TOVEY More than 200 public schools in NSW, many in low socio-economic areas, will receive less funding next year under the new Gonski-inspired model, despite an overall $100 million boost to the sector.

Comments 17

HIV increase at a 20-year high

Medical Generic.

AMY CORDEROY Australia has had the biggest jump in new HIV cases in two decades, leading experts to call for urgent action to tackle the disease.

UK

If London's still calling, young Aussies have stopped listening

walkabout pub

NICK MILLER The British capital is losing some of its allure.

Comments 64

Food shortage means thousands go hungry as data shows shift in needy

Supermarket

ESTHER HAN Charities are turning away more than 10,000 people seeking food parcels and free meals every month in NSW - nearly half the hungry mouths being children - because of depleted food stocks, a national report shows.

AFL

How your club fared in the free agency and trade period

AFL trade period wrap (Thumbnail)

Compiled by Emma Quayle and Michael Gleeson It has taken three weeks but the AFL free agency and trade period has finally ended. Emma Quayle and Michael Gleeson examine which clubs 'won' and which didn't.

Comments 20

Geography loses as HSC students map their futures

HSC exam

AMY MCNEILAGE HSC students are increasingly choosing subjects such as legal studies and construction with their eye on a future job, at the expense of languages and complex maths subjects.

Comments 16

Suicide link to ADHD drug

Pharmaceuticals

Amy Corderoy A nine-year-old boy has killed himself and two other children have attempted suicide while taking a drug used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, federal drug authorities have said.

Broncos top of the league teams

NRL trophy

MICHAEL CARAYANNIS Brisbane Broncos are officially the most successful team in rugby league history.

Pharmacies next target of big two, say analysts

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SARAH WHYTE The growing empires of Australia's two big supermarkets have been branded an international oddity amid a prediction pharmacies may be their next conquest.

Property

How to spot a housing bubble

Housing bubble.

GLENDA KWEK There's no doubt house prices are high - but are we already in bubble territory? Here's a checklist.

Comments 159

Generation EEO

Cynthia Whelan, CEO of Barclays Bank in Sydney.
30th November 2012
Photo: Janie Barrett

RACHEL BROWNE Our federal cabinet might have only one woman but since the 1980s equal employment opportunity has been in place. We look at women who have moved to the top of their professions on this 'level' playing field.

Rudd saved Labor, leaked polling shows

Julia Gillard and Kevin Rudd.

Jonathan Swan, Bianca Hall, Rick Feneley Labor would have been reduced to a parliamentary rump had it not replaced Julia Gillard with Kevin Rudd as prime minister, according to leaked internal polling.

Comments 249

Few women, lots of private school Catholics

Matt Wade The lopsided gender balance of Tony Abbott's cabinet has caused a stir. But how does it compare with the Australian population on other major demographic characteristics such as age, religion, schooling and occupation?

Comment

Sorry kids, to be honest, we're not a charity

dink.

DANIEL FLITTON Opinion Australia needs to make sure it spends wisely when it helps overseas.

Comments 257

Washington massacre: Don't expect gun reform

Washington

NICK O'MALLEY Early on Monday afternoon in the US most of the nation was gripped by the notion that while one gunman was "down" in the DC Navy Yard others might be on the lose. That suggested the mass shooting may have been a terrorist attack.

Gen Y makes a sharp turn away from driving

New train

Jacob Saulwick, Conrad Walters Sydney's 20-somethings are fast ditching their cars for public transport, previously unpublished figures show, revealing the trend is widespread in the city.

Wine no longer enough, buyers want the backstory

Tom harvey.

ESTHER HAN When it comes to exports, South Australia's Barossa reigns supreme over every other wine region in Australia. Last financial year alone, it splashed the world with 12 million litres worth $110 million.

State schools raise $329m to lift income

School Principle Chris Short with Prsesident of the School Council Sharron Clober.

Craig Butt and Benjamin Preiss There is no such thing as a free lunch; or a free education.

Teen drinking falls but concern over risk takers

Alcohol abuse costs a fortune (Thumbnail)

AMY CORDEROY The number of schoolchildren drinking alcohol has fallen dramatically over the past 30 years, a large study of NSW students has found.

Fine words but childcare still overcrowded

Stephanie Morrell with kids from Only About Children childcare

Cosima Marriner, Craig Butt One-third of Sydney childcare centres have no vacancies, forcing some parents to wait nearly two years for a place, with neither Labor nor the Coalition outlining a solution to the childcare crisis experts say is hampering women's workforce participation.

Education

Australia the world's most expensive place for overseas students

education

GLENDA KWEK Australia is the most expensive country for international students, ahead of the US and UK, but the falling currency and improved visa processes could soon seen a resurgence in numbers.

Crackdown for payment adds to effect of rising bills

Bills.

Julie Power Energy companies are cracking down on people who can't pay their power bills, as experts warn ''energy poverty'' is intensifying.

Urban sprawl eats into Sydney's farmland

Warren Rowles

ESTHER HAN Despite his family growing peaches and lemons on the fringes of Sydney for nearly 50 years, Warren Rowles says the farming tradition will end with him.

Ratepayers hit with 5% rise

rates

Aisha Dow and Craig Butt Every Victorian ratepayer will have to find more this year - an average of $76 per household.

Tram squeeze eases but some still suffer

Crowded tram

Adam Carey and Craig Butt Overcrowding on peak-hour trams has eased in the past year but remains a stubborn problem on a number of Melbourne routes.

Comments 49

Gonski reforms: what your school will get?

schools teacher gonski thumb

Jewel Topsfield, Craig Butt and Henrietta Cook Every one of Victoria's 1522 state schools would receive funding increases over the next six years 'if the state signs up to the Gonski reforms'.

Comments 87

Would you like extra germs with that?

Bad apple

See if your favourite restaurant is on the state's name and shame list.

2013 Federal Budget interactive

Sweet and sour budget (Thumbnail)

Explore this year's federal budget to see where the money comes from and goes to.

Tornadoes in Australia

Tornado in Batemans Bay.

See every Australian tornado visualised in this marvelous interactive feature by our colleagues at the Border Mail.

Special features

Most dangerous suburbs

Ten Sydney suburbs account for almost 30 per cent of the city's gun violence.

The human tide

Nearly 70,000 asylum seekers have tried to reach Australia since 1990. More than 1500 have died along the way.

You be the Treasurer

How would you balance the books? Have a go at being the Treasurer with our interactive.

Population interactive

How Australia got to 23 million.

Census 2012 interactive

Browse through data on Australia's population to see how we live.

How we get to work

Our interactive map compares modes of travel in the Victorian capital.

Sydney Gun Crime

Bullets over the 'burbs: a year of shootings.

Ten years after Bali

Our interactive tour of the attack, the terrorist and the lives lost.

Political Interests

Revealed: Politicians' gifts, trips and tickets. A searchable database.

Facebook facts

Friends with money: the global social phenomenon.

Who holds the power

Map the links between Australia's top companies.

Digital Dreamers

Australian startup innovation goes to Silicon Valley.

Wounded in Afghanistan

The road home for Aussie soldiers injured in battle.

Beautiful set of numbers

Check out some of what we did with 2011 Census.

Comments 1

Federal Budget 2012

Visualise all the numbers in the 2012 Federal Budget.

My School rankings

Searchable database: How NSW schools rank.


The hoopla around hipster hotspots

Craig Butt: Where is the hippest hub of hipsterliness? The more we look the less we know.


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