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Representatives Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Affairs
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- Different aspects of disadvantage are often interrelated and
there are well recognised links between poor health and
accommodation and poor educational outcomes for Indigenous
Australians. In addition, data shows there is a strong link between
Indigenous people involved in the criminal justice system and low
levels of educational attainment.
- Associate Professor Somerville, Department of Education Western
Australia told the Committee:
With regard to education, there is no doubt that there is an
absolute correlation between a child failing at school and a child
entering the justice system.[1]
- The New South Wales Government submission highlighted this
issue with New South Wales statistics which reflects a national
trend for juvenile offenders:
Three quarters of NSW juvenile detainees surveyed in 2003 and
2006 left school before finishing Year 9, and over 90 per cent had
been suspended at one time or another. [2]
- As noted in The Report of the Review of Aboriginal Education
‘Higher levels of education make a person less likely to be
involved in risk-taking behaviours such as crime (partially by
increasing income and reducing the incentive to commit
crime)’.[3]
- The Australian Government recognises there is a great need to
improve educational outcomes for Indigenous Australians. The
Closing the Gap strategy has three out of the six targets that
focus on education in order to close the gap on Indigenous
disadvantage.
- These three targets are:
- ensuring all Indigenous four years olds in remote communities
have access to early childhood education within five
years
- halving the gap for Indigenous students in reading, writing and
numeracy within a decade, and
- halving the gap for Indigenous students in Year 12 attainment
or equivalent attainment rates by 2020.[4]
- The Prime Minister’s Report 2011 Closing the Gap outlined
the progress that had been made on the above three targets. The
first of the above targets was highlighted as one of two targets
being most achievable within the given timeframes. The Prime
Minister stressed the importance of supporting children and their
families to ensure more regular preschool attendance.[5]
- This chapter discusses the findings from the inquiry looking
specifically at ways to more effectively engage Indigenous
Australians in the education system. The focus on early
intervention in terms of school readiness and attendance for
Indigenous students and engagement with the education system for
children, parents and communities is discussed. The chapter
highlights successful programs being carried out that encourage
Indigenous community engagement and higher rates of student
attendance for Indigenous youth.
- The Committee is aware that there is not a one-size-fits-all
solution to Indigenous education and encourages schools to work
with their Indigenous community to find a solution to help engage
Indigenous Australians in the education system.
Funding for Indigenous education
- State and territory governments and non-government school
authorities are responsible for providing education services in
Australia. In addition the Commonwealth Government provides
supplementary funds in the form of general recurrent and capital
grants, and plays a central role in achieving cooperation in the
national education system, largely through the Ministerial Council
for Education, Employment, Training and Youth Affairs
(MCEETYA).
- The Department of Education Employment and Workplace Relations
(DEEWR) in its submission to the inquiry outlined its policies and
programs that provide opportunities for all people to build
rewarding social and economic lives. The aim of these policies and
programs work ‘towards overcoming disadvantage, removing
barriers to participation, increasing opportunities, building
capacity and ensuring that services are accessible and provide
effective support for all Australians’.[6]
- DEEWR has five main initiatives to increase the engagement of
young people in education and training, one of which is Indigenous
specific:
- Compact with Young Australians
- Indigenous Education Action Plan
- National Youth Participation Requirement (NYPR)
- Youth Allowance, and
- Support for Low Socio-economic Status Students.
- The Committee was informed that ‘whilst some of these are
mainstream initiatives, Indigenous young people will also benefit
from these initiatives’.[7]
Indigenous Education Action Plan
- The purpose of the Indigenous Education Action Plan (IEAP) is
to guide the national effort towards closing the gaps in early
childhood and school education outcomes for Indigenous Australians.
It includes a range of actions to bring about both systemic and
local-level improvements across six domains of activity that
evidence has shown will make the most impact on closing the gap
between non-Indigenous and Indigenous educational outcomes. These
are:
- readiness for school
- engagement and connections
- attendance
- leadership, quality teaching and workforce
development
- literacy and numeracy, and
- pathways to real post-school options.
- The IEAP is intended to bring together reforms included in
national agreements and national partnerships agreed between
governments, and will also enhance collaboration between
governments, non-government providers and Indigenous
communities.[8]
- During a public hearing in Melbourne, Alf Bamblett of the
Victorian Aboriginal Community Services Association raised concerns
about the length of time it takes for bureaucracies to implement
policies such as the above IEAP. He commented:
There is a thing like a partnership in education that produces
an education policy that says every Aboriginal child, by whatever
year it is, should have an education plan. Terrific, but the policy
has been there two or three years, and now we are starting to see
some rollout of that. So, in the two or three years, you wonder
about the further damage that has gone on in the community.[9]
- At a public hearing DEEWR outlined the inception of the
IEAP:
On 16 December 2009, Australia’s Education Ministers
released a draft Indigenous Education Action Plan for public
consultation. A revised draft was then endorsed by the Ministerial
Council for Education, Early Childhood Development and Youth
Affairs (MCEECDYA), and is ready for final endorsement at the next
COAG meeting.[10]
- The Council of Australian Governments (COAG) meeting on
13 February 2011 did not endorse the IEAP however it was
decided that the Prime Minister would write to all state and
territory leaders and seek a written endorsement from them rather
than waiting for endorsement at the next COAG meeting.
- The Committee has been advised that the IEAP was agreed to in
an out-of-session process, with COAG members writing to the Prime
Minister, in her capacity as Chair of COAG, to record their
agreement to the Plan.
- Associate Professor Somerville, Director of Aboriginal
Education, Department of Education in Western Australia made the
following comments to the Committee regarding poor outcomes for
Aboriginal students and a new national effort by way of the IEAP to
focus on early childhood education.
We recognise as a system that the overrepresentation of
Aboriginal children in the justice system is directly correlated to
their student outcomes. Poor student outcomes equals a very good
chance that those children are going to be in the justice system.
Western Australia has been leading a national effort to write a new
Indigenous education action plan on behalf of the Australian
government and the nation to look at the Closing the Gap
priorities.
What we have found from looking at the data nationally is quite
clear: there is about a two-year lag between the outcomes of
Aboriginal children and the outcomes of the rest of the population,
particularly when we look at the National Assessment
Program—Literacy and Numeracy, NAPLAN. In fact, in Western
Australia, if we look at the NAPLAN results for year 5 for
Aboriginal children, they overlay with year 3; year 7 overlays with
year 5 for the rest of the population; and year 9 overlays with
year 7. So we have a significant issue with regard to student
outcomes.
To be able to turn that around, we believe that we have to put
significant effort into the early childhood area—in other
words, into getting Aboriginal children more ready for
school.[11]
Committee comment
- The Committee is concerned that in spite of the whole of
government commitment to Closing the Gap there has been a
significant time lag for the IEAP to receive endorsement from COAG.
Since the Department of Education, Employment and Workplace
Relations spoke to the Committee the IEAP has been awaiting
endorsement from COAG for nearly 12 months.
- The Committee believes a specific focus on Indigenous
education, such as the IEAP, is critical if progress is to be made
in terms of a higher attendance and retention rate of Indigenous
Australians in the education system. This in turn will assist in
reducing the amount of contact Indigenous people have in general
with the criminal justice system and will contribute towards a
greater sense of wellbeing.
- The Committee was informed in May 2011 that all jurisdictions
had signed off on the endorsement of the IEAP. The Committee
believes that in future the agenda for COAG should be mindful of
the length of time some issues await consideration and endorsement,
and the on-going damage that results from these delays.
Indigenous Australians and the education system
- The Committee’s evidence collected throughout the inquiry
suggested there is a sense of urgency to continue to do more to
positively engage Indigenous Australians with the education system.
The statistics of attendance rates for Indigenous students continue
to be lower than for non-Indigenous students.
- The correlation between lower attendance levels and lower
educational attainment levels between Indigenous and non-Indigenous
students are well documented. Current data from 2007 shows that the
attendance rates for Indigenous students in government schools for
years 1-10 in all states and territories were lower than for
non-Indigenous students.[12] Attendance rates declined from year 1 to year 10
for both Indigenous and non-Indigenous, however the extent of the
decline in attendance was greater for Indigenous students. Figure
5.1 highlights the differences in attendance rates between
Indigenous and non-Indigenous students in year 1 and in year 10.
These differences are most pronounced in the Northern Territory and
Western Australia.
Figure 5.1 Students’ attendance in
government schools by state and Indigenous status, 2007
Source: Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage
Key Indicators 2009 Report, Figure 6.1.1
- Educational retention levels are lower for Indigenous students
compared with non-Indigenous students. A much higher proportion of
Indigenous people aged 15 years and older reported year 9 or below
as their highest level of schooling in every age group in
2006.[13]
- Access to early childhood education in remote areas for all
Indigenous Australians is an area currently being addressed by one
of the six Closing the Gap targets. Providing access to early
childhood education will help establish a connection for
parents/carers and children with the education system and the
Commonwealth Government hopes that in time it will lead to stronger
educational outcomes including higher attendance rates for
Indigenous children at the start of their education.
- Current research suggests that children’s experiences in
their early years affect their development and influence lifelong
learning, behaviour and health. Early childhood education programs
are associated with increased levels of school completion and
enhanced literacy and social skills. The provision of services to
children during their early years may provide an opportunity for
early intervention to address developmental problems.
- Another reason to focus attention and resourcing for Indigenous
children around early childhood education such as at the preschool
level is that ‘investment in early childhood education,
particularly for disadvantaged children is more effective than
intervention at later stages’.[14]
- The Committee received evidence that some parents had not been
actively engaged in the education system when they were growing up
and therefore did not prioritise education for their own children.
Others found the education system was not always culturally
inclusive for Indigenous Australians. Mark Horton noted that:
In many communities education delivery is seen as a waste of
time to parents and youth alike, with some communities have only
45% school attendance. The curriculum is aligned and delivered in
and to an environment that appears alien to these youth,
particularly Aboriginal youth and particularly in remote
communities.[15]
- Alcohol and substance abuse is another significant factor found
to be contributing to low attendance rates for Indigenous students.
Acting Chief Magistrate Sue Oliver, Darwin Magistrates court made
the following statement:
Unfortunately, the social norm is often a household where there
is alcohol and substance abuse and where there has not been an
engagement with education for a couple of generations.[16]
Strategies for Engagement - Both Ways/Two Ways
- The Committee received evidence regarding various state and
territory strategies that are targeting and supporting the
engagement of Indigenous communities in the education system. These
jurisdictions emphasise the need for the education system to work
together with local Indigenous communities in relation to improving
school attendance and ultimately school retention for Indigenous
students.
- In its submission, the Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service
(VALS) commented that Indigenous educators have been advocating a
‘Both Ways’ education concept for decades whereby
partnerships are formed with Indigenous parents and the education
system and it builds a learning culture that has to go both ways.
As an example of this, the Victoria Government's Inquiry into
Strategies to Prevent High Volume Offending and Recidivism by Young
People: Final Report (2009) made some strong recommendations that
recognised the ‘both ways’ concept for early
intervention strategies to support engagement and improve
educational outcomes. One of the recommendations stated:
The State Government expedite the implementation of the recently
released Student Engagement Policy Guidelines. This would require
supporting schools to provide a range of prevention and early
intervention strategies to support engagement and improved
educational outcomes, including: programs to support parental
involvement with schools, including effective parenting programs;
transition support programs for children moving from primary to
secondary school, and for students nearing the compulsory school
leaving age; strategies for identifying at-risk students (including
those in out-of-home care) and linking them to appropriate
specialist support services (for example, youth workers or
counsellors); the introduction of restorative justice practices in
schools; training for teachers in the delivery of emotional
well-being curriculum materials, and in strategies for working with
vulnerable and 'difficult' students.[17]
- The Department of Education, Western Australia has developed
the Better Attendance: Brighter Futures strategy which provides a
comprehensive and integrated approach to the provision of services
to schools, families and the community to improve attendance. The
submission noted that, ‘improving the attendance and
engagement of students is a key to reducing involvement in the
criminal justice system’.[18]
- The Better Attendance: Brighter Futures strategy includes a
significant focus on Aboriginal students. Targeted funding is
provided for schools and clusters of schools with low attendance
rates and high numbers of Aboriginal students at risk to assist
them to prioritise attendance, set targets and develop local
solutions. The strategy includes:
- individual case management, mentoring and strengthening links
with other agencies
- connecting Aboriginal students and their families to the range
of services in their community to address the barriers to
attendance and engagement, and
- supporting schools to create learning environments that meet
the needs of Aboriginal students, whilst being safe, culturally
inclusive and conducive to high attendance.[19]
- In 2009, the Northern Territory Department of Education
employed five regional school attendance officers, in addition to
43 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education Workers and 30
Home Liaison Officers, providing schools with additional resources
to improve student attendance. The School Attendance Team provides
program support and strategic advice dedicated to improving
enrolment and attendance, particularly for children at risk of poor
school attendance.[20]
- The New South Wales Government recognised that adopting a
whole-of-government approach was the most effective way to address
Aboriginal disadvantage. This approach is embodied in Two Ways
Together, the New South Wales Aboriginal Affairs Plan, 2003-2012.
The New South Wales Department of Education and Training (DET)
contributes to this approach through the work currently being
progressed in New South Wales under the New South Wales State Plan
and the Two Ways Together and Keep them Safe frameworks.[21]
- Two Ways Together takes a long-term view by making a ten year
commitment to change. This approach is similar to the Both Ways
concept as the plan requires government agencies to work together
with Aboriginal people to ensure that services are accessible and
culturally appropriate. The plan recognises that services need to
work in partnership.[22]
- The New South Wales DET in its submission stated that
‘programs are being targeted to communities where there is
particular potential to improve school retention and completion
rates and for those that experience early school disengagement and
poor school outcomes for Aboriginal students. Programs such as the
Schools in Partnership initiative, and the Norta Norta Program
focus on improving engagement, attendance, retention, and literacy
and numeracy achievement with the view to achieving educational
success for Aboriginal students.’[23]
- The Queensland Government is working with Indigenous leaders to
implement innovative models of education that are suited to the
needs of particular communities. More recently, the Bound for
Success education strategies for Cape York and the Torres Strait
are a response to the educational outcomes for Indigenous students
in these regions, which are on average lower than for other
Queensland students. These strategies focus on community and
government working in partnership and stimulating high aspirations
and expectations. The Queensland Department of Education and
Training, working with Cape York Partnerships has commenced a three
year pilot at the Aurukun and Coen campuses of the Western Cape
College incorporating club and culture elements in the education
program, and strengthening governance arrangements to ensure that
the community has a greater engagement.[24]
Indigenous community engagement
- Indigenous community engagement is a critical factor for
schools that have low attendance rates for Indigenous
students.
- A strong message that came through the inquiry was the need for
a ‘Two Way’ engagement in the education sector between
schools and the Indigenous community in order to improve the
effectiveness of education for Indigenous students. It was evident
that the most successful programs are those initiated and run by
Indigenous people in collaboration with government and the
non-government sector.
- The Department of Education, Western Australia made the
following comment in relation to the importance of schools
connecting and maintaining a relationship with its school
community:
Schools that work together with communities and encourage
participation in the school and at home enable students to learn
and meet expectations. Evidence suggests that school connectedness
and supportive social relationships have been associated with lower
levels of absenteeism, delinquency, aggression, substance use and
sexual risk behaviour, and higher levels of academic achievement
and self-esteem amongst children.[25]
- John McKenzie from ATSIL NSW/ACT, commented that it is
important to see improving the effectiveness of education as a
holistic approach. ‘We have to be treating not only the child
as a whole individual but also the family and the community within
which they live.’[26]
- The need to engage Indigenous parents more in the education
system was also emphasised by Associate Professor Somerville from
the Department of Indigenous Affairs, Western Australia:
The other thing that we are not doing is engaging Aboriginal
parents in the educative process. That does not mean going to a
school council; that means getting their children to school, being
involved in literacy and numeracy, reading and so on. We are not
ensuring that those Aboriginal parents are involved in the cultural
aspects of being Aboriginal. Noel Pearson and a number of people in
Queensland have come out with the Stronger Smarter philosophy,
about being stronger in your culture and smarter at school.[27]
- Professor Foley and Professor Lovat from the University of
Newcastle provided some good examples of how schools could engage
with their Indigenous communities.
If a school has Indigenous Australian students, teachers should
assume a leadership role seeking to become actively involved in
supporting and promoting Indigenous student success. To achieve
this, they will need to look beyond the school for sources of
support. These may include parents, Indigenous support staff,
community members and Indigenous funding programs. Teachers need to
be proactive rather than reluctant participants. They need to be
given the tools and motivation to research, interact and
network.[28]
- In addition they suggested that:
Teachers in rural schools also need to find out who is the chair
of the local Aboriginal Council, make an appointment to meet with
that person and determine ways in which the Council might assist in
dealing with the matters outlined above.[29]
- The Australian Children’s Commissioners and Guardians
submission emphasised the importance of engaging the support of the
Indigenous community when running Indigenous specific programs. The
submission stated:
Any culturally appropriate school programs, sporting activities,
or diversionary programs will not be effective if they are not seen
by the children and young people to be valued and supported by
Indigenous families and communities, or if there are no
expectations that they are to attend or participate.[30]
- In addition, the point was made that ‘parents and
communities may need support to strengthen their roles around
parenting, activities and school attendance as an effective point
of intervention, to ensure optimum development of children and
young people.’[31]
- Associate Professor Somerville outlined a successful program
involving the Indigenous community, parents and high expectation
for students that over 10 years has demonstrated outstanding
outcomes. He explained:
Follow the Dream: Partnerships for Success, is a program that
Rio Tinto is involved in with us, along with the Polly Farmer
Foundation. So there are a number of very large philanthropic and
industry groups. The program looks at supporting Aboriginal
children from year 8 through to year 12 to ensure they get a TER.
We have turned that around in 10 years. In 2002, two Aboriginal
children got a TER that got them to university. Now we are
averaging 30 Aboriginal children with TERs who move to
university—and with TERs over 90, which will get you straight
into medicine. So there is an enormous switch that we have seen
over the time. Nearly 300 Aboriginal children are getting a Western
Australian certificate of education due to those programs, and the
programs are successful because they involve the Aboriginal
community. Parents are completely involved in it. They have very
high expectations, so children are expected to finish and do very
well. We ensure that teachers understand and the cultural aspects
are set into place. [32]
Committee comment
- The Commonwealth has committed to providing better access to
early childhood education in remote areas for Indigenous
Australians as it understands that participation, attendance and
retention is critical in order to improve educational outcomes for
Indigenous students.
- The Committee recognises that there has been a significant
shift in the way that Commonwealth, state and territory governments
are developing policies on Indigenous engagement and the education
system.
- The Committee commends Victoria and New South Wales for
committing to a Both Ways/Two Ways Together strategy to address
Indigenous disadvantage issues. The Committee is encouraged by the
focus on early intervention in states and territories throughout
Australia in relation to Indigenous education.
- The Committee commends the Western Australia Follow your Dream:
Partnerships for Success program which has successfully engaged
Indigenous communities, industry, the philanthropic sector and
government. The program has demonstrated a remarkable increase in
the number of Indigenous students achieving TER scores and most
impressively, high TER scores.
- The Committee believes the continuing development of effective
partnerships between local Indigenous communities and education
systems across Australia is essential in increasing attendance and
retention rates for Indigenous students in the long
term.
- Each school needs to work alongside the Indigenous
parents/carers of school-aged children to create a partnership
which will result in the parents/carers seeing value in sending
their children to school each day.
- The Committee encourages school communities and local
Indigenous communities to engage more actively with each other in
order to foster positive relationships between parents and carers
of Indigenous children and the education system. The Committee
believes there is room for further innovation in this
area.
- The Committee encourages school communities throughout
Australia to adopt the ‘Both Ways’, ‘Two
Ways’ strategy that has been discussed in this
chapter.
- The Committee is aware that many schools throughout Australia
are already fostering positive relationships with their local
Indigenous communities. However, as a broad recommendation the
Committee sees value for all schools in incorporating and giving
greater recognition to Indigenous culture.
- The Committee recommends that the Minister for Education works
through the MCEETYA and the IEAP to implement greater Indigenous
recognition in schools.
Recommendation 16 – School and community
relationships
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The Committee recommends that the Minister for Education
work through the Ministerial Council on Education, Employment,
Training and Youth Affairs assist schools throughout Australia to
deliver better education outcomes for Indigenous students and to
foster more connected and positive relationships with their local
Indigenous community. The Committee considers that as a minimum
schools should be incorporating a range of the following activities
within the school:
- hang or fly an Aboriginal Flag and the Torres Strait
Islander flag alongside the Australian flag within the school
grounds
- learn about Indigenous sites of significance in the
local area
- incorporate an acknowledgment of country at the start
of significant events as well as at school
assemblies
- commission local Indigenous artists to paint a mural,
or build or create sculptures within the school
grounds
- use local Indigenous languages names for school
classrooms or sporting houses/teams
- build an Indigenous garden and invite those with bush
tucker knowledge to be involved
- celebrate Mabo day, NAIDOC week, Reconciliation week
and Harmony day
- engage Indigenous school mentors for schools with high
Indigenous populations, and/or
- engage the local Indigenous community to teach language
and culture afterschool and provide extra curricula
activities.
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School readiness
- School readiness has been recognised as an area requiring more
attention to give children the best start in education. Ensuring
children are healthy and have a supportive and safe environment to
live in is a vital starting point for school readiness. Early
childhood education at the preschool level focuses on teaching
children how to interact and learn in a social environment,
preparing them for the future years of learning.
- School readiness takes into consideration a certain degree of
language development, in order for the teacher and the child to
communicate; physical well-being or an awareness of limitations
that need to be considered; motor coordination and skills,
concentration and emotional adjustment, and a certain degree of
independence.[33]
- In its submission, VALS discussed risk factors for Indigenous
people that contribute to their offending behaviour. One of several
of the contributory factors linked to offending was the recognition
that often low birth weight leads to a lack of school readiness and
low academic achievement. VALS commented that ‘low birth
weight is a risk factor with a long reaching impact on school
readiness, transition and academic achievement.’[34]
- This issue of healthy pregnancies and risk factors for low
birth weights for Indigenous women is discussed in chapter 4. Once
again the Committee is aware of the interconnectedness of the
contributing factors towards Indigenous disadvantage in the area of
health and education.
- The New South Wales Department of Education and Training
highlighted this point in its submissions’ introductory
statement:
The NSW Department of Education and Training recognises that
improving the educational outcomes of Aboriginal children and young
people cannot be achieved in isolation from the work being
undertaken in other key human service delivery areas such as
health, housing, juvenile and criminal justice, employment and
economic development.[35]
- The Committee heard from the Director of Aboriginal Education
from the Department of Education, Western Australia that a
significant number of Aboriginal children are not school ready for
year 1:
I will use the Western Australian experience—we find that
about 50 to 60 per cent of the Aboriginal children are not ready
for year 1. It is interesting that around 50 to 60 per cent of
Aboriginal children are not ready for high school—year
8—as we see through the NAPLAN results.[36]
- The Queensland Department of Education and Training has an
early intervention strategy to assist Indigenous children engage
successfully in the education system, focussing on improving the
understanding of the English language in pre-prep programs. During
a public hearing in Brisbane the Committee was informed:
We have also implemented 35 pre-prep programs in discrete
Indigenous communities to help kids as young as age 3 to 3½
to get a better understanding of the English language because the
language of school is standard Australian English. We are looking
at getting these children prepared to move into prep and getting
them to understand the English language better so they can achieve
better outcomes. Evidence shows that our Indigenous students tend
to be two years behind other students by the time they reach grade
3 and after that they continue to stay two years behind. They are
learning at the same rate and so we need to close that gap in the
early years. Therefore, that is a big focus for our Indigenous
students.[37]
- A lack of school readiness from the outset can result in
on-going negative consequences throughout the child’s
education and may lead to low school attendance rates.
School attendance
- The Committee received an overwhelming amount of evidence that
highlighted the correlation between low school attendance rates for
Indigenous students and low levels of educational attainment for
years 10 and above.
- The Director of Aboriginal Education, Western Australia,
Professor Somerville reiterated this view at a roundtable public
hearing in Sydney. He stated:
Aboriginal children across Australia do not achieve in literacy
and numeracy—one might say it is because they do not attend
school—and also are not retained to year 12 in the same
numbers as non-Aboriginal children.[38]
- The Committee noted that a lack of school attendance has a
detrimental impact on the child’s educational and social
development. The Western Australia Department of Education stated
that:
Absenteeism from school has adverse effects on a child's
educational and social development. They miss critical stages of
development with their peers and are less likely to achieve
academic progress. Absenteeism can exacerbate issues of low self
esteem and social isolation. Improving school attendance is a key
strategy in improving the life outcomes for young Aboriginal
people.[39]
- In a submission from two professors from the University of
Newcastle, they commented on low Kindergarten attendance rates for
Indigenous children which obviously had a negative flow on effect
and set the children back from those children who had attended a
full year of kindergarten. Several reasons were suggested for why
this was occurring:
Indigenous children statistically have very low records of
kindergarten attendance. This is for various reasons, including a
lack of access, lack of funds, lack of available places, lack of
transport, or a combination of factors. In many situations, while
children may have had a nurturing family upbringing, their
non-attendance at kindergarten results in school commencement
without the early educational training that establishes the
essential building blocks for their educational future.[40]
- The New South Wales Ombudsman informed the Committee that from
its work it had become concerned about the apparently high rates of
non-attendance by Aboriginal children in particular locations. The
Ombudsman stated that:
This problem often emerges late in primary school, as children
are making a transition from childhood to adolescence. The issue is
of particular significance to young people because they are not
only being deprived of a fundamental right relating to their
development but they also lose the social support network and
structure that the school community can provide.[41]
- In relation to the issue of attendance, the Director of
Aboriginal Education in Western Australia raised a concern about
understanding the real school attendance rates. He commented that
whilst the attendance rates often collected by the education
departments reflect the attendance rates for role call in the
morning it was well understood that these rates did not reflect
regular full day attendance. It was suggested that the regular
attendance rates for Indigenous students in Western Australia were
more likely to be 35 per cent:
In Western Australia, 35 per cent of Aboriginal children attend
school regularly. So there is a significant issue for us, and that
is the same across all jurisdictions. We have taken our eye off the
ball. [42]
- During a public hearing in Cairns, the Commissioner for the
Family Responsibility Commission (FRC), David Glasgow also raised a
concern regarding the accuracy of attendance level data that was
collected from schools. He commented that the role was often taken
in the morning and by the afternoon several of the children were no
longer at school.
We get figures from the Education Department. I have been a bit
suspicious of their figures because I have seen people marked as
attending school when some seem to have the afternoon off.[43]
- Commissioner Glasgow discussed some of the challenges faced by
families with Indigenous children who are brought to the attention
of the Commission in relation to school attendance levels.
We are finding out what is happening to some of these children,
so we have to be careful to find out whether the kids are suffering
from some sort of disability. I am not there to punish the parent;
I am there to find out what is happening to the children. So we are
now working very closely with the school case managers, who will go
out to the household and find out, basically, what is happening in
that household.[44]
- Throughout the inquiry the Committee heard about a number of
initiatives that are being implemented that are working towards
increasing school attendance levels for Indigenous students.
Initiatives to increase school attendance
Breakfast and lunch programs
- Breakfast and lunch programs have proven to be an effective way
of increasing school attendance rates. These programs have
multifaceted benefits including increasing attendance rates,
providing a nutritional start to the day to assist with learning
and concentration as well as potential business spin
offs.
- The Department of Indigenous Affairs, Western Australia
discussed a successful school breakfast program that was carried
out on the Ngaanyatjarra Lands School in Western Australia. The
program was a successful attendance incentive and in turn assisted
the women running the breakfast program to start off a small
catering service:
A group of four Warburton grandmothers decided to take action to
get children in their community to attend school by starting a
small school breakfast program. With the assistance of donations
from the charitable organisation, Foodbank, the women have been
preparing breakfast for local school children for the past
18-months. The program has been credited for increasing attendance
at the school by 60 per cent.
The program has not only increased children participation in the
class room but has also increased momentum within the community
with up to 25 young mothers and community members actively involved
in preparing breakfast meals daily. The success of the program has
enabled the women to commence a small catering service.[45]
- Many people raised the importance and success of breakfast
programs.[46] The
Committee was also told that ‘a long term breakfast program
would do more for education of young Aborigines than many other,
more elaborate proposals.’[47]
After school activities
- After school activities have proven to be a successful and cost
effective way of getting children to attend school. They have a
flow on benefit in that the children are in a supervised
environment during the after school activity which decreases
boredom and opportunities for them to come into contact with the
criminal justice system.
- Many schools in remote Indigenous communities have a ‘no
school no pool’ policy that appears to be a successful
incentive to encourage students to go to school. In its submission
the Australian Youth Affairs Commission commented on the success of
the ‘no school, no pool’ policy in reducing
truancy:
It is even through simple strategies that school engagement can
be increased with both the Northern Territory and the Western
Australian Government introducing 'No School, No Pool' policies in
regional communities where young people can only access community
recreation facilities if they attend classes. 'No School, No Pool'
has resulted in an up to 75% reduction in truancy in some
communities.[48]
- The South Australian Courts Administration Authority raised the
‘critical importance of responding to students'
non-attendance at school through both the role of Education
Officers responsible for truancy, and individual school policies
such as ‘no school - no pool’, and ‘no school -
no football’, which are currently operating in various South
Australian schools.’[49]
- Another successful initiative was discussed with the Committee
during the Roundtable public hearing held in Sydney. Andrew
Cummings from the Australian Youth Affairs Coalition stated:
I was in the Northern Territory a few weeks ago and I met a
young youth worker from a remote community who is working for the
YMCA there. She was telling us how on one day a week she goes into
a local community school. The usual attendance rate there is around
60 per cent. On the one day a week that she goes in, it goes up to
over 90 per cent. All she does is things like go in and talk to the
young people, put on barbecues, have games in the pool after school
and that kind of thing. The rule is that if the kids do not turn up
at school they do not get to take part in the program. I do not
know how much that costs, but I cannot imagine that it is more than
a few thousand dollars a year.[50]
Sporting programs
- Sport can have a positive impact on higher school attendance in
a direct way such as ensuring that children attend school in order
to participate in a sporting program. The benefits of sport and
education are well documented in terms of having a positive impact
on learning and education in an indirect way, such as children
being more attentive in school after participating in physical
education.
- In addition the engagement of Indigenous youth in sport can
promote positive social and health wellbeing, minimise the
potential for offending behaviour for Indigenous youth and provide
an incentive for school attendance.
- In its submission the Australia Sports Commission stated
that:
Sport and recreation are shown to have a positive impact on
Indigenous Australians, improving overall health, reducing
violence, crime, theft and vandalism, reducing substance abuse and
self-harm and improving school attendance.[51]
- DEEWR highlighted the Government’s recognition of the
important role that sport has to play in education and outlined the
Sporting Chance Program (SCP) to the Committee:
This program is an Australian Government initiative that uses
sport and recreation as a vehicle to increase the level of
engagement of Indigenous students in their schooling to improve
their education, training and employment outcomes. The SCP has been
implemented through providers working together with schools,
education authorities, sporting bodies, businesses and community
groups.
The SCP has two elements: school-based sports academies for
secondary school students and education engagement strategies for
primary and secondary students. Across Australia in 2010, there
will be 54 sports academies and five education engagement
strategies. In 2010, through Australian Government funding of over
$10 million, some 10,000 Indigenous students will be supported
through this program.[52]
- An example of a successful Indigenous sporting initiative
operating in Geraldton, Western Australia, is where netball is used
as a way to re-engage Indigenous females with the education system.
Leza Radcliffe, Representative of the Western Australian Justice
Congress commented:
Just looking at some of the other programs in Geraldton, we have
our midwest netball academy looking at sport being a positive grab
to get kids back into school. That is a female academy. We offer
netball and basketball. It is the only academy of its kind in the
country that is managed and operated by an Aboriginal organisation.
The important thing is leadership and education attendance. When
the program initially started, the average attendance for years 8
and 9 was around 35 per cent to 37 per cent. Our stats last year
reflect a turnaround of almost 60 per cent, with 92 per cent being
the average classroom attendance and active participation. [53]
- Sporting programs provide an avenue for engaging in education
Aboriginal students, who may otherwise have been at risk of leaving
school early. The Department of Indigenous Affairs Western
Australia outlined the purpose of the Clontarf Foundation's
Aboriginal Football Academy:
It provides an education program for Aboriginal students in
partnership with selected secondary schools and colleges. The
football academies are helping to improve the participation,
attendance and retention rates of Aboriginal students. There are
eight Clontarf football academies and two annexes in public schools
across the State.[54]
- The Department of Education, Western Australia commented on the
success of the ‘Clontarf model’ in re-engaging
Indigenous students. It stated:
The Clontarf model has proven to be a catalyst for a number of
other schools to establish Aboriginal programs utilising different
sports to cater for disengaged Aboriginal youth.[55]
Queensland Family Responsibilities Commission
- The Family Responsibilities Commission (FRC), which began
operation in July 2008 has the objective of restoring social norms
in Indigenous communities, with a strong focus on education and
improving school attendance.
- The FRC applies to Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal community
members who are welfare recipients who reside or have lived in one
of the four CYWR trial communities (Arukun, Coen, Hopevale and
Mossman Gorge) for three months since 1 July 2008.
- In regards to improving educational outcomes and school
attendance the FRC will be notified if:
- a person’s child is absent from school 3 times in a
school term, without reasonable excuse, and
- a person has a child of school age who is not enrolled in
school without lawful excuse.
- Commissioner of the FRC, David Glasgow explained that
encouraging children to go to school is a fundamental element of
breaking the cycle of disadvantage, offending and social
dysfunction:
If school becomes a matter of interest for children, and they
continue to be there, they are not somewhere else where they could
cause mischief. If they are busy, and there are activities for them
during the evening, they are not on the street causing mischief. If
the parents are convinced that there is an advantage out of
education and there are job opportunities subsequently, then there
is a good reason to continue.[56]
- The FRC sends out a school attendance case manager to the
houses of children who are not turning up on time for school. The
Commissioner outlined that the case managers speak with the
families and knock on doors when required to encourage parents to
get their children to school on time:
If your children do not turn up today, they will be around to
your house and they will knock on the door, wake you up—that
happens in Aurukun; people do sleep in—get the kids and get
them to school. Those percentages are fairly firm. You have to have
your child there by 8.30. If you turn up at nine o’clock, you
are late and you are marked late. It is not only getting them to
school but also getting them to school on time.[57]
- FRC case managers have been effective in increasing school
attendance levels. Part of their success is the capacity to work
with the household to address the range of issues impacting on the
child. If a child is not attending school regularly then usually
that reflects a household that does not value education, or does
not have the capacity to organise itself, maintain routines or
provide transport to school. Often the behaviour of the child is a
symptom of a household dysfunction and both must be addressed if
school attendance and attainment are to be achieved. The FRC
commented that case managers assisted in increasing the school
attendance rates in Aurukun to nearly 70 per cent.[58]
Committee comment
- The Committee is aware of the need to improve preschool
attendance rates for Indigenous children as this provides many of
the skills and habits of learning that ensures success within the
school system. In addition it is less daunting for families to be
engaged at this level especially if they themselves have not had
positive experiences of schooling. Evidence has shown that the
numeracy and literacy gaps that exist at this level between
Indigenous and non Indigenous children often persist throughout
their education. This lag can contribute to lower self esteem in
Indigenous students and predispose them to disengage from
education.
- The Committee commends the work of all governments in improving
school readiness through preschool attendance and subsequent school
attendance rates. Closing this gap will take time, and the
Committee stresses the importance of a collaborative approach from
schools, governments and communities. A number of attendance
incentive programs are operating around Australia, from breakfast
and lunch programs, to participation in recreation and extra
curricula activities after school which are having a positive
impact on school attendance rates.
- Key to tracking progress is accurate data on attendance rates
and the Committee is concerned to note the deficiencies in how
comparable national data is currently collected. While full day
attendance rates are crucial to assess improvements in attendance
and direct attendance incentives to areas required, the Committee
notes that data on morning versus afternoon attendance rates may
have value in assessing the best strategies to achieve full day
attendance.
Recommendation 17 – School attendance data
|
-
|
The Committee recommends that the Minister of Education
immediately conduct a review into how daily school attendance and
retention rates are measured to ensure that data collected can
accurately inform strategies to increase attendance and retention
rates and monitor progress in these areas.
|
- The Committees notes the success of a number of programs in
increasing school attendance. The Committee urges the Commonwealth
Government to ensure that funds and assistance are available to
support NGOs and communities where they are operating incentive
attendance schemes.
- The Committee urges the Commonwealth Government to move to a
more integrated and holistic approach to Indigenous change where
initiatives such as school breakfast programs, or after school
sporting activities may be recognised as having health, social and
educational benefits and so be able to be funded and implemented by
a cross agency (flexible funding) approach.
- Common to many of these successful incentive schemes is a
cooperative approach that engages the community and is able to
address more holistically the impediments to school attendance. In
particular the Committee notes the benefits of the case manager
approach, to increasing school attendance, whereby assistance is
directed to households and communities and Indigenous leaders are
involved in driving change and holding community members to
account. The Committee discusses the need for more holistic and
integrated cross agency approaches, such as that by the FRC, in
chapter 8 and makes recommendations regarding for changes to
traditional service delivery practices.
Recommendation 18 – School attendance incentive
programs
|
-
|
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Government commit to the provision of funds and administrative
assistance to establish and expand across Indigenous communities
the number of school attendance incentive programs (such as
breakfast and lunch programs, and sporting and cultural activities
during and after school).
|
Teaching
- The need to encourage more Indigenous people into the teaching
profession was raised with the Committee. An increase in the number
of Indigenous teachers would assist in forming positive
relationships between Indigenous communities and the
school.
- In his submission Dr Damien Howard highlighted this point when
he stated that ‘one important strategy to create success for
Indigenous students is to have more Indigenous
teachers.’[59]
- In its submission the Department of Education and Training,
Northern Territory (DET), discussed its ‘DET More Indigenous
Teachers program’. DET offers three types of programs that
provide financial support for full-time studies:
- Cadetships (20) - linked with the DEEWR national cadetship
support program (Indigenous Cadetship Support)
- Scholarships (14) - two of which are specifically allocated for
people from remote locations under the Wesley Lanhapuy
scholarships
- Fellowships (6) - offered to current DET employees.[60]
- In addition the submission commented that ‘internally
through close networking between Remote Workforce Development and
the CDEP transition program there is monitoring and support of
Indigenous learners who are studying at certificate level, for
example, an assistant teacher completing a Certificate III in
Classroom Support. This has meant that for the first time in many
years there is a clear pathway from certificate level teaching
studies to higher education level and becoming a qualified
teacher.’[61]
- New South Wales DET emphasised the importance of Aboriginal
mentors and role models in the education workforce:
Employing more Aboriginal people in schools, TAFE Institutes and
regional and state offices provides a greater diversity of role
models for young Aboriginal students. The visibility of such role
models encourages young Aboriginal students to see and hear the
value of learning and achievement from Aboriginal people and the
life opportunities available to them. Greater Aboriginal
representation in the teaching workforce contributes to the
development of teaching and learning practices that recognise and
meet the needs of Aboriginal students.[62]
- Teaching methods was another issue raised during the course of
the inquiry in relation to improving the effectiveness of the
education system for Indigenous Australians.
- The submission from the University of Newcastle emphasised the
need for homogenous teacher training covering kindergarten through
to year 12 across all higher education teaching
institutions.[63] The
submission pointed out that in 2007 ‘staff in Australian
Schools Survey revealed that thirty one percent of early career
primary teachers said their pre-service training was of no help in
assisting them in teaching Indigenous students.’[64]
- Knowing that children may be coming from a background where
English is not their first language or where in kindergarten it may
be their first introduction to learning in a social setting away
from parents is important for teachers when developing class plans.
Hearing loss stemming from recurrent ear infections (discussed in
chapter 4) is another significant issue for many Indigenous
children and requires specialised teacher awareness.
- Certain school and classroom structures can enable suitably
skilled teachers to create educational success for Indigenous
students. Unfortunately, there is little formal training that
equips teachers with these skills and Dr Howard suggested that
there is ‘institutional resistance to schools changing any of
their methods of operation to assist Indigenous students to
succeed’.[65]
- In its submission VALS argued that there was a need for
teachers to have ‘an appreciation of the cultural, social,
environmental and economic factors that can seriously impair the
academic potential of Aboriginal children’.[66]
- The need for teachers and schools to adopt high ambitions for
Indigenous students was emphasised many times throughout the
inquiry. Associate Professor Somerville noted that ‘high
expectations do make a difference when young people are expected to
move through the system’.[67]
- Similarly, the Australian Children’s Commissioners and
Guardians said that ‘it is important that parents, schools
and communities have high expectations of Indigenous children, and
expect them to succeed’.[68]
- Dr Howard commented that:
It is critical that positive relationships are combined with
high expectations. Positive social relationships cannot be at the
expense of high educational expectations. The research is clear
that both positive relationships and high expectations are
needed.[69]
- A review of MCEETYA’s Australian Directions in Indigenous
Education 2005‑2008 strategy concluded that improvements
could be achieved over time with continued commitment and
resources. The Chief Investigator, Professor Peter Buckskin
stressed that improvements in teacher training and school
leadership were crucial:
We need to change the way pre-service teachers are being trained
in terms of attitudes and expectations around Aboriginal people and
stereotypes need to be confronted to prevent graduate teachers from
entering classrooms with low expectations of Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander students. Professor Buckskin states that students
are quick to pick up on low expectations and their response was
often to meet these low expectations.[70]
- The importance of establishing positive and supportive school
environments based upon high expectations of Indigenous children
was highlighted by several witnesses. Both DEEWR and the Australian
Children’s Commissioner quoted the successes of Dr Chris
Sarra.
Dr Chris Sarra, a leading figure in Indigenous school reform,
claims that an underlying philosophy of high expectations for
success is crucial to achieving better outcomes for children and
young people. His "Strong and Smart" program at Cherbourg State
School in Queensland, where he was principal, led to a 94% cut in
absenteeism and significant improvements in literacy and
numeracy.[71]
- In line with better cultural training for teachers and holding
high expectations for Indigenous students, the Department of
Education, Western Australia stated it had:
...designed and implemented programs that encourage effective
teaching to better meet individual student needs; increase support
to school leaders; train staff to be more culturally competent; and
encourage staff to hold high expectations of Aboriginal
students.’[72]
- Queensland Police Commissioner Atkinson gave an example of a
positive teaching approach in Aurukun whereby the school had
employed a local Indigenous woman as a teacher’s aide to
provide support in the classroom. He told the Committee that:
One class that we sat in on had about 12 children, two teachers
and a local Indigenous woman who was a teacher’s
aide—so three adults with 12 children, a very, very
respectful appreciation of Indigenous culture.[73]
Committee comment
- The Committee considers there are numerous benefits stemming
from an increase in the number of Indigenous teachers working in
the profession. Employing more Indigenous teachers will create
positive role models for students and communities and assist in
bridging the gap between school environments and Indigenous
communities. A greater number of Indigenous teachers will assist in
incorporating Indigenous culture and practices into the classroom
with the flow on effect of increasing the engagement and attendance
rates of Indigenous students.
- The Committee is of the view that positive Indigenous role
models play a critical role in providing aspirations for Indigenous
children and closing the gap on Indigenous disadvantage. By
encouraging Indigenous Australians to be teachers it highlights the
importance of education and attainment for Indigenous Australians.
The Committee encourages all states and territories to increase the
support provided to Indigenous students who are studying to become
teachers.
- The Committee acknowledges the value of Indigenous
teacher’s aides in the classroom and encourages state and
territories to similarly provide additional support to recruit and
train Indigenous people for these positions.
- From the evidence received the Committee believes further work
should be done on teacher training to enhance the understanding of
Indigenous social, cultural and economic issues. This is critical
as it is often graduate teachers who are appointed to regional
schools in the first few years out of university.
- Equipping teachers with specific teaching strategies for
Indigenous students will assist in engaging Indigenous students and
will have a beneficial impact on increasing school attendance rates
for Indigenous students.
- As part of the teaching strategies the Committee endorses the
high expectations strategy for teaching Indigenous students. The
Committee understands that students will often meet the
expectations of those around them whether these are high or low.
The results achieved through innovative partnership programs
demonstrates that with the right environment and teaching
strategies Indigenous students can excel in education
attainment.
- The Committee recommends that the principle of setting high
expectations for Indigenous students should be incorporated into
teacher training curricula throughout Australia. The Committee
suggests that all states and territories should improve cultural
training for teachers and hold high expectations for all Indigenous
students.
- During its visit to New Zealand the Committee observed how
changes in teaching practices and the approach to schooling can
dramatically improve education outcomes, confidence and future
choices of Maori students. At Opotiki College, a regional township
in the North Island of New Zealand with a majority of Maori
students who are from a lower socio economic background, students
entering year 8 were significantly below national average rates for
literacy and numeracy.
- Within just two years the change to the teaching approach
produced a dramatic turn-around in the student results. Students
are now performing at the average and in their final years students
are surpassing the national average. Retention rates for students
have increased and the students that the Committee spoke with were
positive about their futures, could identify a career path, and had
made a choice not to engage with drugs or other criminal
behaviour.
- Central to the philosophy of the school was a culture of high
expectations for all students, Maori included, and all teachers
were required to undertake specialised training to adapt their
teaching methods to this philosophy. Teachers were expected to be
conversant in Maori culture (though not necessarily speak the
language) in order to understand the background of students and be
better able to engage and build positive relationships with
students, their families and the wider community.
- In both Australia and New Zealand there is clear evidence of
the success of this approach and there is a need for teachers to be
better equipped when it comes to engaging Indigenous students in
education. The Committee recommends a comprehensive and mandatory
professional development program aimed at better equipping teachers
to meet the needs of Indigenous students and assist Indigenous
students to excel.
- In addition, the Committee notes that the 2011-2012 Australian
Government Budget allocated $425 million over four years to reward
top performing teachers through the National Rewards for Great
Teachers Program.[74]
The Committee recommends that some of this $425 million be directed
towards the formal recognition of outstanding performance in the
teaching of Indigenous students.
Recommendation 19 – Teacher development
|
-
|
The Committee recommends that the Minister for Education
work with the Ministerial Council on Education, Employment,
Training and Youth Affairs develop a comprehensive and mandatory
teachers’ professional development program that:
- provides specialist training on teaching Indigenous children,
and where necessary the teaching of English as a second language
(ESL)
- recognises poor English language skills and health and hearing
issues which may impact on learning
- gives teachers a competency in cultural knowledge and
sensitivity to assist in working with Indigenous communities and
families
- can be adapted to reflect local Indigenous community needs and
culture, and
- trains the teachers to set and achieve high expectations for
Indigenous students.
The Committee also recommends that a portion of the
2011-12 Budget funds allocated to reward top performing teachers is
directed towards the formal recognition of outstanding performance
in the teaching of Indigenous students, where real outcomes in
progress can be demonstrated.
|
[1] Robert
Somerville, Department of Education Western Australia, Committee
Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 77.
[2] New South Wales
Government, submission 84, p. 21.
[3] New South Wales
Department of Education and Training, submission 4, p. 28.
[4] FaHCSIA,
submission 79, p. 7.
[5] Closing the Gap
Prime Minister’s Report 2011, p. 14.
[6] DEEWR,
submission 63, p. 1.
[7] DEEWR,
submission 63, p. 3.
[8] Department of
Education, Employment and Workplace Relations, submission 63, pp.
3-4.
[9] Alf Bamblett,
Victorian Aboriginal Community Services Association, Committee
Hansard, Melbourne, 3 March 2010, p. 24.
[10] Glen Hansen,
Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations,
Committee Hansard, Canberra, 17 June 2010, p. 3.
[11] Robert
Somerville, Department of Education Western Australia, Committee
Hansard, 30 March 2010, p. 23.
[12] Overcoming
Indigenous Disadvantage: Key Indicators 2009, Productivity
Commission: Canberra, 2009, p. 6.3.
[13] Overcoming
Indigenous Disadvantage: Key Indicators 2009, Productivity
Commission: Canberra, 2009, p. 6.15.
[14] SCRGSP, Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage Key
Indicators 2009 Report, p. 4.25
[15] Mark Horton,
submission 85, p. 3.
[16] Sue Oliver,
Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 18.
[17] Victorian
Aboriginal Legal Service, submission 40, pp. 28-29.
[18] Department of
Education, Western Australia, submission 81, p. 8.
[19] Department of
Education, Western Australia, submission 81, p. 8.
[20] Northern
Territory Government, submission 89, p. 24.
[21] New South
Wales Department of Education and Training, submission 43, p.
3.
[22] New South
Wales Government, Aboriginal Affairs, Two Ways Together
<www.daa.nsw.gov.au/policies/policy.html> accessed 30 March
2011.
[23] New South
Wales Department of Education and Training, submission 43, p.
9.
[24] Queensland
Government, submission 91, p. 13.
[25] Department of
Education, Western Australia, submission 81, p. 10.
[26] John
McKenzie, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 32.
[27] Robert
Somerville, Department of Education Western Australia, Committee
Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 22.
[28] Dennis Foley
and Terry Lovat, University of Newcastle, submission 28, p. 16.
[29] Dennis Foley
and Terry Lovat, University of Newcastle, submission 28, p. 16.
[30] Australian
Children’s Commissioners and Guardians, submission 59, p.
12.
[31] Australian
Children’s Commissioners and Guardians, submission 59, p.
12.
[32] Associate
Professor Somerville, Department of Education Western Australia,
Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 78.
[33] Royal
Children’s Hospital Melbourne, Community Paediatric Review,
<www.rch.org.au/emplibrary/ccch/CPR_Vol14No3_PS_SchlRead.pdf>
accessed 9 March 2011.
[34] VALS,
submission 40, p. 3.
[35] New South
Wales Department of Education and Training, submission 43, p.
2.
[36] Robert
Somerville, Department of Education Western Australia, Committee
Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 77.
[37] Angela
Leitch, Department of Education and Training, Queensland, Committee
Hansard, Brisbane, 4 May 2010, p. 13.
[38] Robert
Somerville, Department of Education Western Australia, Committee
Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 78.
[39] Department of
Education Western Australia, submission 81, p. 3.
[40] Dennis Foley
and Terry Lovat, University of Newcastle, submission 28, pp.
13-14.
[41] New South
Wales Ombudsman, submission 56, p. 4.
[42] Robert
Somerville, Department of Education Western Australia, Committee
Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 78.
[43] David
Glasgow, Families Responsibilities Commission, Committee Hansard,
Cairns, 7 May 2009, p. 3.
[44] David
Glasgow, Families Responsibilities Commission, Committee Hansard,
Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 76.
[45] Department of
Indigenous Affairs, Western Australia, submission 83, p. 9.
[46] Harry Blagg,
Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 26; Commissioner
Atkinson, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 29;
Indigenous Community Volunteers, submission 18, p. 4.
[47] Rosemary
O’Grady, submission 77, p. 10.
[48] Australian
Youth Affairs Coalition, submission 61, p. 8.
[49] Courts
Administration Authority, submission 69, p. 2.
[50] Andrew
Cummings, Australian Youth Affairs Coalition, Committee Hansard,
Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 56.
[51] Australian
Sports Commission, submission 42, p. 3.
[52] DEEWR,
submission 63, p. 7.
[53] Leza
Radcliffe, Western Australian Justice Congress, Committee Hansard,
Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 74.
[54] Department of
Indigenous Affairs, Western Australia, submission 83, p. 10.
[55] Department of
Education, Western Australia, submission 81, p. 9.
[56] David
Glasgow, Family Responsibilities Commission, Committee Hansard,
Cairns, 7 May 2010, p. 5.
[57] David
Glasgow, Family Responsibilities Commission, Committee Hansard,
Cairns, 7 May 2010, p. 13.
[58] David
Glasgow, Family Responsibilities Commission, Committee Hansard,
Cairns, 7 May 2010, p. 13.
[59] Damien
Howard, submission 87, p. 30.
[60] Department of
Education and Training, Northern Territory, submission 104, p.
2.
[61] Department of
Education and Training, Northern Territory, submission 104, p.
2.
[62] New South
Wales Department of Education and Training, submission 43, p.
10.
[63] Dennis Foley
and Terry Lovat, University of Newcastle, submission 28, p. 14.
[64] Dennis Foley
and Terry Lovat, University of Newcastle, submission 28, p. 13.
[65] Damien
Howard, submission 87, p. 28.
[66] Victorian
Aboriginal Legal Service, submission 40, p. 28.
[67] Robert
Somerville, Department of Education Western Australia, Committee
Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 79.
[68] Australian
Children’s Commissioners and Guardians, submission 59, p.
12.
[69] Damien
Howard, submission 87, p. 31.
[70] Victorian
Aboriginal Legal Service, submission 40, p. 27.
[71] Australian
Children’s Commissioners and Guardians, submission 59, pp.
11-12; DEEWR, Committee Hansard, Canberra, 17 June 2010, p. 18.
[72] Department of
Education Western Australia, submission 81, p. 8.
[73] Robert
Atkinson, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 29.
[74] Investing in
Australia’s Regions, Australian Government Budget 2011-2011,
p. 11
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