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Education | Latest News & Analysis | The Sydney Morning Herald
Education | Latest News & Analysis | The Sydney Morning Herald

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Education

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Colleges face collapse under planned international student caps.
Exclusive

NSW teacher training rules overhauled as accreditation process scrapped

The shake-up has been welcomed by the teachers’ union, but slammed by critics who warn it will erode quality assurance and vital oversight of thousands of teaching courses.

  • by Lucy Carroll

Latest

Academic leader Boris Schedvin.

Academic leader remembered as respectful, thoughtful and energetic

Boris Schedvin devoted his life to excellence in teaching, research and university leadership.

  • by Ian Marshman
Some of the worst-paid graduates will have the highest HECS debts.

Degrees that lead graduates to the biggest pay packets revealed

Students have been urged to consider potential earnings compared with the cost of their university degrees and long-term HECS debt.

  • by Daniella White
NSW Police are investigating after a group of senior King’s School students allegedly killed a goanna at a school camp last month.

NSW private schools face new rules on $1.6 billion in taxpayer funding

The changes come after four Sydney schools were told to repay almost $47 million in government funding after being declared for profit or non-compliant in the past decade.

  • by Lucy Carroll
Letch
Opinion

Our kids aren’t failing NAPLAN. NAPLAN is failing our AutoCorrected kids

If our education system’s purpose is to turn students into passive consumers and mindless followers, then it is doing better each year.

  • by Malcolm Knox
Opinion

Despite the FM PM every AM, it’s Dutton getting the listeners

When it needs to win back voters, the government looks underpowered.

  • by David Crowe
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Birrong Girls

‘We have a few secrets up our sleeve’: The Sydney girls' school rising in the HSC charts

An analysis of HSC average scores shows all-girls fully selective and comprehensives outperform all-boys counterparts.

  • by Lucy Carroll and Nigel Gladstone
The Queensland Teachers’ Union work bans have been canned after a hearing in the Queensland Industrial Relations Commission.

Parent-teacher partnerships critical for school success

There is so much that should be done in public schools, but it has to be done with the partnership of teachers, governments and parents.

The Victorian government has funded a new underquoting taskforce.

Coalition proposes relaxation of HECS, lending rules to help home buyers

The federal opposition says banks need to take more risks or there will be a whole group of people unable to own a home.

  • by Paul Sakkal and Millie Muroi
Australian students’ performance has remained steady compared with the PISA results released in 2019.

One in three students failing to meet NAPLAN standards, data reveals

Tens of thousands of NSW students have failed to reach the baseline standard in literacy and numeracy tests. Can you answer these year 5 numeracy and year 9 grammar questions correctly?

  • by Lucy Carroll
Music should be
Opinion

We’re out of tune with best practice, but the NSW music teacher crisis can be fixed

The work required to rescue music education could start immediately, and would cost the NSW taxpayer very little money.

  • by James Humberstone
Sydney University vice chancellor Mark Scott.

‘Great uncertainty’: Sydney Uni warns staff of cuts ahead of foreign student caps

The vice chancellor wrote to staff on Tuesday warning that the institution was considering how it would manage financial shortfalls from a cut to international students.

  • by Daniella White
Year 12 students at Glenwood High
Exclusive

Revealed: The state’s top schools for HSC English, maths and science

North Sydney Boys is the state’s top-ranked HSC school. But plenty of Sydney’s comprehensive schools are not far behind when subject averages are examined.

  • by Lucy Carroll and Nigel Gladstone
HSC and ATAR.
Opinion

If an HSC student gets 88 for everything, why shouldn’t they be recognised?

Parents of school-aged children should be entitled to better information than simply HSC band sixes.

  • by The Herald's View
The cost of certain university degrees has got me rethinking what I should study.
Opinion

As a year 12 student, I dream of doing an arts degree. The price could be a lifetime of debt

I’ve been working towards studying arts for two years. But now as I prepare my university preferences, the reality of how much debt I could be saddled with has me thinking twice.

  • by Saria Ratnam
HSC averages image
Exclusive

Sydney’s top-ranked school has an HSC average subject score of 89.4. How does your school fare?

By band sixes or averages, North Sydney Boys is the state’s top school. A new analysis of HSC scores has shaken up the top five.

  • by Lucy Carroll and Nigel Gladstone
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Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Michele Bullock

Michele Bullock played down her intelligence at school. In year 9, something changed

Bullock was in the choir, played hockey and was unashamed about her flair with numbers. But she worries high school economics is “slipping off the radar”.

  • by Christopher Harris
Almost 250 staff and students from Sydney University were victims of sexual assault and harassment last year.

Sydney University’s sexual assault, harassment reports more than double in a year

There were close to 250 sexual assault and harassment reports at the University of Sydney, but most victims didn’t want their cases investigated.

  • by Kayla Olaya
An economist has warned Australia could dip into a recession if there is a dramatic drop in international students.
Exclusive

Labor’s international student caps ignite recession fears

Australia could be pushed into a recession if universities are forced to slash their international student numbers under Labor’s migration crackdown.

  • by Daniella White
Opinion

The most deplorable thing unis copied from big business, aside from vice-chancellor pay

Successive federal governments have engineered a kind of backdoor privatisation of our universities. It’s a race to the bottom.

  • by Ross Gittins
Universities say 14,000 jobs will be lost under the government’s migration crackdown.
Updated

Universities say 14,000 jobs face axe as Labor’s ‘poll-driven’ crackdown bites

Australian universities claim the government’s migration crackdown is already costing the sector dearly, even before proposed caps are implemented.

  • by Daniella White
Eton has told new students they will have to use a basic Nokia.

Eton mandated basic Nokias. These NSW private schools are watching

Mounting evidence suggests excessive smartphone use is associated with depression, anxiety and poor sleep quality and now some schools are taking steps to protect students from digital addiction.

  • by Christopher Harris
More than 75 per cent of Gen Z workers want to spend two or three days in the office as part of a hybrid-work policy.
Opinion

Group assignments prepare you for life, just not in the way you think

Here are some of the lessons I’ve learnt from the dreaded endeavours.

  • by Bella Westaway
Colleges face collapse under planned international student caps.

Alarm from within as colleges face collapse under Labor’s foreign student crackdown

Local students could be left out of pocket and unable to finish their courses in the event of college closures, the Australian Skills Quality Authority has warned.

  • by Daniella White
TAFE NSW is set for an overhaul that will ensure it meets local community needs.
Exclusive

Hundreds of jobs under threat at TAFE amid sector overhaul

The government is revamping the tertiary education provider after an independent review found the organisation’s impact was declining.

  • by Kayla Olaya
The options presented would give families in the area access to co-ed schools.
Exclusive

More Sydney schools targeted for co-education by Minns government

Options include making Balgowlah Boys co-ed, doing the same with Mackellar Girls, or allowing local students to enrol at Manly Selective until year 9.

  • by Christopher Harris
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International students Vedant Gadhavi and Ayushi Patel at Monash University.

Labor facing growing resistance to international student caps

The Albanese government is planning sweeping reforms to cap foreign enrolments for 2025 – but universities and students are rallying in opposition.

  • by Noel Towell
NSW Minister for Education Prue Car said the state would suffer from the $12 billion GST shortfall.
Editorial

New tune needed for music education

The days of class sets of recorders or xylophones have gone, with music now expected to be taught by general classroom teachers.

  • The Herald's View
Charlotte Gresham, Dylan Chappel, Xander Brennan, Patricia, Mundine, Madeleine Vohland, Ava Tu and Joshua Ahn play in the Sydney Youth Orchestra.

‘When I was at school we all had a recorder’: Calls to mandate music lessons

Thousands of children are leaving primary school with no formal music education as band programs close and teachers struggle to include the arts in classroom lessons.

  • by Mary Ward
Chantal Spada and her kids, Christian,  Antonio and Julian (left to right) had to trek to their library to complete their homework.

Digital divide: Students filing assignments on phones or using public computers

Students from poorer families are resorting to using phones and public libraries to get homework done, leaving many falling behind.

  • by Caroline Schelle
Newington College
Editorial

A co-ed rebellion by Newington old boys is out of step and now over

A group aiming to stop girls being enrolled at Newington College has suffered a massive rejection and failed to win a seat on the alumni board.

  • The Herald's View
Students entering Newington College, which will soon accept female students.

Bid to keep out girls from Newington College suffers major blow

A breakaway faction has failed in its bid to stop plans by Newington College to admit girls to the historic private school.

  • by Lucy Carroll
The federal government has given states a deadline of the end of September to indicate if they will sign the next Better and Fairer Schools Agreement.

NSW schools face missing out on billions in clash over funding

Federal Education Minister Jason Clare has given the states a deadline of the end of September to indicate if they will accept a new 10-year school funding deal.

  • by Lucy Carroll and Christopher Harris
George Williams, incoming vice chancellor of Western Sydney University.
Exclusive

‘Debt until death’: Vice chancellor attacks soaring fees as degrees hit $50,000

The cost of every degree for 2025 has been revealed. A university boss says young people are being priced out of their dreams.

  • by Daniella White
The overwhelming majority of Labor frontbenchers went to public schools but the statistics were different among the Coalition.
Exclusive

Private, public or selective? Where the people ruling NSW went to school

If you want a job on one side of politics, one type of education background appears to pay dividends.

  • by Christopher Harris
Universities have moved to cancel international students’ enrolments.
Exclusive

The secret probe into university facing foreign student allegations

The higher education regulator is reviewing allegations a university is poaching students and has low English standards for foreign students, documents reveal.

  • by Daniella White
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School generic.
Exclusive

‘Concerns have been raised’: $40m contract to upgrade schools axed, referred to the ICAC

More than 30 new and upgraded school projects and 100 new public preschools are at risk after the NSW government terminated the contract.

  • by Chris O'Keefe
The kids will be all right, so long as their teachers are trained in the new syllabus.
Opinion

A great leap forward for school children (as long as we don’t forget their teachers)

The overhaul of the NSW primary school syllabus should benefit 800,000 students, but we must teach their teachers how to implement it.

  • by Jordana Hunter and Nick Parkinson
Rachel Powell

James Ruse principal leaves top-performing selective for rival all-girls school

The outgoing head of James Ruse Agricultural High Rachel Powell said she believes in parents having “school choice” between single-sex and co-ed options.

  • by Lucy Carroll
Windsor South Public School

‘Biggest change in decades’: New science, history syllabuses in NSW schools

A radical overhaul of the state’s school syllabuses marks a dramatic shift away from inquiry and student-led learning to a knowledge-rich curriculum.

  • by Lucy Carroll
The Scots College in Bellevue Hill will lift fees for year 12 by 5 per cent to $48,630 including levies.

Scots College and the donation from alleged Chinese money launderer

Zhaohua Ma, allegedly part of a $10 billion money laundering syndicate smashed by the AFP last year, donated more than $100,000 to the Bellevue Hill school.

  • by Kishor Napier-Raman and David Estcourt
Justine Schofield.

Technology and designs on a fabulous future

Realising your calling early is a blessing but so can not getting the mark for the uni course you wanted – just ask celebrity chef Justine Schofield.

Grace Losco of Newtown High School of the Performing Arts was equal first in HSC Business Studies.

Dancer’s star turn in business studies

Tips and advice from a top-ranked student and HSC exam marker.

Lilliana Davis in Japan.

A Japanese odyssey for big dreaming Lilliana

Lilliana Davis’s passion for the Japanese culture gave her the drive to master the language and excel in the HSC.

As a student at the San Francisco Ballet School, Amelia Soh is completing her HSC through the Pathways program.

Ballerina’s pointed pathway led to San Francisco

A typical day for Amelia Soh is ballet from 8.30am until 4.30pm. Then school begins usually via Zoom meetings from Sydney.

HSC students study at the library.

Can you answer these 50 HSC questions?

From physics to mathematics and business studies - take the 2024 HSC quiz.

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Josefine Pisano, Jakob Lal and Charles Fawcett, who are the youngest students studying a subject in this year’s HSC.

The pre-teen whiz kids tackling the HSC

Jakob Lal, 11, could do algebra when he was four years old. Josefine Pisano and Charles Fawcett are equally gifted. They’re among the youngest candidates in the year 12 exams.

  • by Megan Gorrey
‘‘You’ll never look back and think you put in too much work, or you studied too hard. The hard work, pays off."
1:07

Grace Losco, who gave the Business Studies graduate tips

‘‘You’ll never look back and think you put in too much work, or you studied too hard. The hard work, pays off."

Keep studying smart, not hard and don't overload yourself.
0:55

Words of advice from Bump star Safia Arain

Keep studying smart, not hard and don't overload yourself.

"It's just a big achievement to even finish the HSC".
0:55

2022 HSC student Lilliana Davis reflects on her year

"It's just a big achievement to even finish the HSC".