National

"I've been really troubled ... about the increased presence of commercial providers in schools," says primary school ...

The companies shaping public education

Private companies are gaining unprecedented access to students' personal and academic data, drafting NAPLAN questions and producing teaching and learning materials, prompting fears that businesses are dictating the focus of public education policy.

Latest education news

Education Minister Simon Birmingham says universities have been receiving "rivers of gold" from the taxpayer over recent ...

Unis reject claims they are rolling in cash

Australian universities have angrily rejected the Turnbull government's assertions they are receiving "rivers of gold" from the taxpayer and can easily absorb the funding cuts announced in the May budget.

"Only someone who is very committed to early education would choose to work there for less money and longer hours than a ...

The teachers paid less than carpenters

Australia is lagging significantly behind other OECD countries when it comes to the number of three-year-olds enrolled in high-quality preschool programs, and preschool leaders say a big part of the problem is low pay for early education teachers.

HSC English exams could be shorter and include multiple choice questions.

Word limits will 'fuel the HSC tutoring industry'

Leading English academics and former HSC chief examiners have warned that plans to make HSC English exams shorter and give questions word limits will make it easier for students to game the system and will "further fuel the HSC tutoring industry and its commercial gain".

Hekmat Alqus Hanna, a 50-year-old refugee from Iraq, is doing his HSC this year. "I have to become a doctor again ...

The 50-year-old HSC student

Hekmat Alqus Hanna is the oldest student taking the exams this year. A humanitarian refugee from Iraq, he is determined to be a doctor again.

Nearly 56 per cent of commencing bachelor degree students were admitted based on criteria other than ATAR in 2015.

The students most likely to drop out of university

More than half of all students starting a bachelor degree at an Australian university are now admitted on a basis other than their Australian Tertiary Admissions Rank (ATAR), despite this cohort having one of the highest dropout rates.