Community awareness

The community awareness activity aims to demonstrate the value of the department’s work by promoting its activities, engaging the community in key issues and educating the public in the work and procedure of the House and its committees.

In 2015–16 the budget allocation for the activity was $1.254 million and expenditure was $0.500 million. Results against the performance criteria for the activity are summarised in Appendix 1. Staff levels, by location, are shown in Appendix 2.

Performance summary

In 2015–16 the department continued to promote the work of the House and its committees by developing engaging communication products, events and seminars.

In order to meet continued demand for information about the work of the House, the quarterly About the House magazine will be replaced by a fortnightly email publication delivering regular pieces of news and information.

The department’s social media platforms saw sustained growth, and the face-to-face seminar program received consistently positive feedback from participants.

The department contributed to the education of school-aged children by supporting the Parliamentary Education Office and school tours of Parliament House. We continued to engage younger audiences through the My First Speech competition and to raise awareness of the work of the House and parliament through various internship and exchange programs.

Electronic media

The department continued to engage with the community through social media platforms. The department’s Twitter handle, @AboutTheHouse, achieved sustained growth and recently reached 37,000 followers. Given its real-time nature, the platform continues to be a useful tool for engaging with the public and the media.

twitter pic

(@AboutTheHouse Twitter mentions, 18 April 2016

The department’s Facebook following grew to 4,600 in 2015–16 and the platform is proving to be a valuable tool for publishing more descriptive information about the work of the House and its committees. The department also trialled a new Instagram platform in order to promote the work of the Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters.

The About the House YouTube channel grew to 2,240 subscribers during the reporting period. Question time remains the most popular content on the YouTube channel
and is posted each sitting day.

YouTube is also used to broadcast committee inquiry information and highlights from the House.

Seminars

The department continued to use its seminar program to raise awareness of its work, particularly among staff in government departments.

The department offers four seminar topics: ‘About parliament’, ‘About the budget’, ‘About legislation’ and ‘About committees’. Five seminars with a total of 154 participants were held in 2015–16.

The department is also able to tailor seminars to the needs of particular organisations or agencies. In 2015–16 three such custom seminars were held: for the Department of Communications and the Arts, for the Department of Health and for the Loddon Murray Leadership Group. There were a total of 66 participants.

Formal evaluation of the seminar program continues to garner positive feedback.

Competitions

My First Speech is an annual nationwide competition open to Australian students enrolled in years 10 to 12. In 2015 (the fourth year of the competition) entries were received from all over the country.

Muthukkumarasamy Mohanapiriyan from AB Paterson College on Queensland’s Gold Coast won the 2015 competition, followed by Rachel Aquino from Chatswood High in New South Wales and Anna Pryse-Smith from Ballarat Grammar in Victoria.

My first speech competition

My First Speech Competition, 2015. Left to right: Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Hon Tony Smith MP; winner, Muthukkumarasamy Mohanapiriyan; the Hon Catherine King MP; second-place winner, Rachel Aquino; the Hon Stuart Robert MP; third-place winner, Anna Pryse-Smith; Senator the Hon Simon Birmingham; John Alexander OAM MP.

The students were asked to imagine themselves as a newly elected member of parliament and to write and present on video a three-minute speech either about issues important to their electorate or about something they would like to communicate to the federal parliament and the Australian people.

Judges were Member for Longman and Assistant Minister for Innovation the Hon Wyatt Roy MP; Member for Griffith, Terri Butler MP; and Member for Melbourne, Adam Bandt MP.

Competition winners presented their speeches at Parliament House in front of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Hon Tony Smith MP, as well as other members, senators and guests.

Parliament House Open Day

Over 5,000 visitors attended the Parliament House Open Day on 19 September 2015.
The event was organised by the Department of the Senate with assistance from the Department of the House of Representatives and the Department of Parliamentary Services.

The 2015 Open Day coincided with the 800-year anniversary of Magna Carta. The Australian Parliament is home to the only original copy of Magna Carta in the southern hemisphere. For this reason, the Open Day focused on the two themes of Magna Carta and the House at Work.

The Speaker’s University Challenge was one of the key events of Open Day. The Australian Defence Force Academy (ADFA) and the Australian National University (ANU) debating societies argued whether Magna Carta is still relevant today. The ANU, arguing in the affirmative, took away a spectacular trophy made by the ANU School of Art’s Glass Workshop.

Other highlights of the day were tours of the Chamber and the Speaker’s suite, areas not usually accessible to the public.

Speakers university challenge 2015 

2015 Speaker’s University Challenge. Speaker of the House of Representatives the Hon Tony Smith MP (third from left) with the ADFA and ANU debating teams, Australian Parliament House Open Day 2015.

Open day Speaker 

Open Day 2015. The Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Hon Tony Smith MP, answers questions in the Speaker’s suite.

Open day 2015 

Open Day 2015. Over 5,000 people visited the building. Some of the younger guests enjoyed getting to know some of our national emblems, pictured here in the Marble Foyer.

Parliamentary assistants program

In 2015–16 the parliamentary assistants program, run by the Serjeant-at-Arms’ Office, entered its 16th year. The program offers university students part-time employment in the House of Representatives to promote understanding of, and engagement with, the work of the parliament.

Parliamentary internship program

The Australian National Internship Program has operated since 1993 under an agreement between the Vice-Chancellor of the Australian National University and the Australian Parliament’s Presiding Officers. Australian and international students enrolled at the university under the program undertake an internship placement of about 10 weeks as part of their formal course of undergraduate study.

In the second semester of 2015, 20 of the 37 students enrolled in the program were placed with a member or senator. In the first semester of 2016, another 46 interns joined the program, of whom 18 were placed with a member or senator.

The departments of the House of Representatives and the Senate, as well as the Parliamentary Library, assist the program. The House and Senate departments provide an orientation seminar for all students before they take up their placements at Parliament House and elsewhere.

During the placement each student completes a research project on a subject agreed with their host. The report is assessed by the university and counts towards the student’s degree.

In 2015–16 the program continued to give students from around Australia and from other countries the opportunity to extend and complement their academic studies by studying and working in the parliamentary environment.

Parliamentary exchange program for Australian Defence Force

Each year, a small number of Australian Defence Force representatives spend a week at Parliament House, hosted by a member or senator. This arrangement began in 2003 as an expansion of a program begun in 2001, under which members and senators take up a short placement with Defence personnel and participate in their working lives. Arrangements for participation by members and senators are made through the Assistant Minister for Defence in conjunction with the Department of Defence.

In August 2016 the program saw members and senators hosting 16 Defence Force representatives.

The departments of the House of Representatives and the Senate collaborate to support the exchange program and provide orientation seminars on the work of the chambers and committees.

Public visits to the House

In 2015–16 public interest in the sittings of the House continued to be high. Over the 70 sitting days, 55,435 people attended the galleries. Visitor numbers peaked at more than 1,000 per day on 18 occasions, including budget day (brought forward by one week to 3 May 2016 due to the impending double dissolution), when 1,216 people visited the chamber, slightly down from 1,410 in 2014–15; and budget reply night, when 1,327 people visited, down from 1,403 in 2014–15.

These special events in particular required close coordination between the Serjeant-at-Arms’ Office, the Australian Federal Police and the Parliamentary Security Service, because of the heightened security environment.

Parliamentary Education Office

Administered by the Department of the Senate, the Parliamentary Education Office (PEO) is a joint office and receives part funding from the department. Its mission is to provide parliamentary education services to schools, teachers and students. It also provides parliamentary education support services to members and senators.

The two departments liaise closely on the PEO’s strategic direction and the content of its teaching, educational material and online resources through the PEO Advisory Committee, jointly chaired by the Deputy Speaker and Deputy President. The committee may also advise the Presiding Officers on the support needs of members and senators in relation to parliamentary education. The committee met in November 2015. The Clerk Assistant (Table) attended as an observer.

Programs at Parliament House

In the reporting year, 89,087 students from around Australia participated in the PEO’s experiential role-play program at Parliament House. This was a 1 per cent decrease on 2014–15, a normal amount of variation and to be expected in a near-capacity program. Attendance figures reflect the program’s continued popularity. The cumulative total of students who have participated in role-play programs since the building opened in 1988 passed two million in 2016. In 2015–16 the PEO also conducted a number of activities targeting students, trainee and qualified teachers, school principals and parliamentary visitors.

In late 2015 the PEO acquired a second regular teaching space, the APH Public Alcove. This additional room ensures secure accommodation for the simultaneous delivery of two role-play programs and brings many further benefits.

Modifications were made to the PEO’s operating procedures for managing school groups to make adjustments for the second teaching space and to ensure overall compliance with the enhanced security requirements at Parliament House.

In collaboration with the Parliamentary Skills Centre, the PEO made a significant contribution to the Pacific Women’s Parliamentary Partnerships Project, managed by the Parliamentary Skills Centre, through written resources and conference presentations. The project aims to increase the level of gender awareness within the parliamentary cultures of many Pacific nations (see page 45 for more information.)

The parliamentary venue management system, which includes school tour bookings, continues to undergo refinement. When fully functional, the system will provide improved information and services to schools and tour operators that book student programs at Parliament House.

Outreach activities

The PEO continued to invest in a comprehensive range of outreach strategies to be able to provide parliamentary education services to a broad student population, not just those able to travel to Canberra.

The PEO website (www.peo.gov.au) remains a highly effective and popular vehicle for disseminating parliamentary education material and resources to teachers and students located around Australia. PEO website patronage increased in 2015–16 to 1,357,684 visitor sessions, a 50 per cent increase on 2014–15. The increase may reflect the addition of considerable new content and improved functionality, which has broadened audience appeal and allows the site to better support the draft national curriculum in civics and citizenship. The introduction of rolling advertisements on the homepage for web content is also likely to have expanded the website’s appeal.

During the year, the PEO continued to revise and update web content and developed significant new content, including the new video, ‘Get involved’, which was designed to inform and encourage young people to be active citizens. The reporting year saw expanded resources supporting the national curriculum, as well as improvements to the interactive website ‘Your questions on notice’, which allows students to ask questions of parliamentary educators. ‘To our last shilling: Australian Parliament and World War 1’, an online resource acknowledging the role of the parliament in World War 1, was expanded to include fact sheets. The PEO website resource ‘Parliament now’ continued to develop and present up-to-date information about current parliamentary events and the achievements and statistics of the Forty-fourth Parliament.

In recognition of its national responsibilities, the PEO continued to explore the potential of new technology for the remote delivery of PEO programs and resources, including interactive videoconferencing. This is on track to be introduced early in the new financial year.

School visit program

The PEO continued its work with members and senators on a limited scale through a targeted school visit program called Parliament Alive. In 2015–16, visits took place in 60 schools in northern Queensland, suburban Sydney and regional New South Wales. More than 4,000 students participated in programs delivered in their classrooms. These activities gave students an invaluable opportunity to learn first-hand about the role and work of their federal member or senator.

Educational resources

The PEO continued to produce a wide range of educational resources, both in print and online, including several new educational videos for students and teachers. It also developed a series of lesson plans for teachers, based on the draft national curriculum in civics and citizenship. Demand for PEO publications and resources from both teachers and parliamentarians continued to be strong in the course of the year.

A new personalised resource for members and senators, ‘Representing you’, was developed to support member and senator interaction with students in their electorates and states and territories. PEO publications and resources were regularly reviewed and updated during the year to ensure their currency, accuracy and relevance.

Outlook

The PEO continued to produce a wide range of educational resources, both in print and online, including several new educational videos for students and teachers. It also developed a series of lesson plans for teachers, based on the draft national curriculum in civics and citizenship. Demand for PEO publications and resources from both teachers and parliamentarians continued to be strong in the course of the year.

A new personalised resource for members and senators, ‘Representing you’, was developed to support member and senator interaction with students in their electorates and states and territories. PEO publications and resources were regularly reviewed and updated during the year to ensure their currency, accuracy and relevance.

 

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