Parents spend $100k to send kids to public schools
Victorian parents will have to fork out thousands more than their interstate counterparts to send their child to a government school.
Victorian parents will have to fork out thousands more than their interstate counterparts to send their child to a government school.
After rising food and petrol prices, interest rate hikes and Christmas, the mounting cost of sending kids back to school is set to slam families.
Terms such as “mum” and “dad” should be replaced and Christmas and Easter celebrations ditched according to new inclusion guidelines for childcare.
Two private schools in Melbourne’s southeast have opted out of the free kinder program, leaving parents more than $3000 a year out of pocket.
Parents have hit out at childcare centres raising their fees, saying it’s totally “out of step” and could stop mums returning to work.
Shocking safety failures at Victorian childcare centres have been uncovered, with kids exposed to harm — and even cared for by crims.
Parents and carers will be able to walk their prep students into the classroom when the school year starts, while other COVID-normal changes have been announced.
This is the new plan to shake up Australia’s childcare curriculum so toddlers are trained early before they enter their hi-tech future.
The way prep is taught in Victorian classrooms is about to change, after young students missed out on crucial face-to-face learning time during the pandemic.
A $3.7 million funding boost will be used to help prepare kindergarteners for school, amid fears they missed out on crucial socialisation during a stop-start year of learning.
Longer holidays and cash bonuses are being offered to childcare workers as desperate daycare operators battle staff shortages across nearly 900 centres.
Stalled academic progress due to extensive periods of remote learning is causing some parents to consider holding their kids back a year, but experts are urging them to let kids transition.
The state government is set to continue rolling out three-year-old kinder across the state with 6000 additional teachers and educators need for the program. But the program could be in jeopardy before it even begins.
Just a few hours of screen time can have concerning long-term consequences for kids, with new research revealing how important it is for students to return to face-to-face learning.
Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/victoria-education/early-education/page/8