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SMH schools summit

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NSW education shows some improvement but must apply itself more

NSW education shows some improvement but must apply itself more

NSW has carried an unenviable reputation for a public education system hit by falling standards, teacher flight and cancelled classes but Minister for Education and Early Learning Prue Car told a school summit those days were receding with recent reforms.

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SMH Schools Summit 2024 as it happened: Prue Car, Jason Clare speak; co-education on agenda

SMH Schools Summit 2024 as it happened: Prue Car, Jason Clare speak; co-education on agenda

Coeducation, funding and creating schools of the future: follow our live coverage of the Sydney Morning Herald Schools Summit.

  • by Anthony Segaert
Every school in NSW to offer gifted education programs

Every school in NSW to offer gifted education programs

High potential and gifted education is available in only half the state’s schools, but Education Minister Prue Car plans to change that.

  • by Daniella White and Lucy Carroll
Top Sydney principal criticises ‘odd’ teacher salary plan

Top Sydney principal criticises ‘odd’ teacher salary plan

The SCEGGS Darlinghurst principal criticised plans to reward 10 per cent of state school teachers with a $150,000 salary, revealing her own staff’s pay.

  • by Mary Ward
Schools in a ‘resources race’ for staff amid teacher shortages

Schools in a ‘resources race’ for staff amid teacher shortages

Knox Grammar’s headmaster says his school is experiencing a major staff shortage and there is stiff competition between education sectors.

  • by Daniella White and Amelia McGuire
Almost half of NSW’s year 1 students do not read as well as they should
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Education

Almost half of NSW’s year 1 students do not read as well as they should

The most disadvantaged year 1 students were half as likely to meet the expected standard as their advantaged counterparts.

  • by Jordan Baker
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Tudge ‘very cautious’ on international student return

Tudge ‘very cautious’ on international student return

Melbourne University’s international chief has urged a wary federal Education Minister to approve a plan for students put forward by Victoria as coronavirus rages overseas.

  • by Michael Fowler, Madeleine Heffernan and Sumeyya Ilanbey
Minister says quality teaching, not more school funding key to better results

Minister says quality teaching, not more school funding key to better results

Australia should look to the UK to reverse two decades of decline in reading, maths and science, says federal minister Alan Tudge.

  • by Adam Carey
‘Moral imperative’: Rush risks poor-quality curriculum, educators warn
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Teaching

‘Moral imperative’: Rush risks poor-quality curriculum, educators warn

Unions and principals warn the government is pushing the new curriculum into classrooms too soon, risking poor-quality syllabuses, under-prepared teachers and short-changed students.

  • by Jordan Baker
Catholic leader dismisses school funding reform as ‘flight of fantasy’

Catholic leader dismisses school funding reform as ‘flight of fantasy’

A proposal by former education minister Adrian Piccoli to reduce segregation and disadvantage in schooling has been slammed by the leader of NSW Catholic schools.

  • by Anna Patty
Schools will trial ‘untimed syllabuses’ before ambitious statewide reform

Schools will trial ‘untimed syllabuses’ before ambitious statewide reform

NSW Education Standards Authority chief executive Paul Martin said he believed the idea, where students progress through school according to their ability rather than their age, had merit but implementing it next year “was too radical for the moment”.

  • by Natassia Chrysanthos

Original URL: https://www.smh.com.au/topic/schools-summit-1ndu