![]() EXPERT COMMENT EXPERT COMMENT: Response to Federal Minister's call on "dud teachers" Associate Professor Chandra Shah, Monash University - "What is beyond dispute is the disparity in total funding and resources available to schools across different sectors, which has the most impact on outcomes" "The comments by the minister are ill-informed, " says Assoc Prof Shah. "The reasons for the disparity in PISA outcomes across sectors are multifactorial. "However, it is beyond dispute that disparity in total funding and resources available to schools across different sectors is the most important factor. "The minister may want to 'bottle' this fact when he advises the prime minister on funding allocation across schools. "Schools with fewer resources are often forced to assign 'out-of-field' teachers to classes, for example, when an English teacher is assigned to teach mathematics. This tends to happen less in well-endowed private schools which have higher levels of staffing and which are able to attract subject-qualified staff by paying higher salaries." For an interview, please contact Associate Professor Chandra Shah at Monash University on MOBILE or at email. Professor Kim Beswick, UNSW (Sydney) - "Negative rhetoric about teachers has the effect of deterring the best potential teachers" "Every graduate from an initial teacher education program has passed the Literacy and Numeracy Test for Initial Teacher Education," says Professor Beswick. "One of the greatest obstacles to improving educational outcomes for Australian students is the politicisation of teaching. "Negative rhetoric about teachers has the effect of deterring the best potential teachers. Why, for example, would a person able to succeed in tertiary level mathematics opt to enter a profession that is constantly maligned when they can choose a career that will guarantee respect (e.g. medicine, engineering, accounting ….). "Comments such as those from the minister work directly against Recommendation 2 of the QITE review report 'Attract high-quality candidates'. "Government schools educate the vast majority of disadvantaged students. The persistent, and unconscionable link in Australia between socio-economic status and educational outcomes suggests that teachers in some independent schools may have an easier task than their colleagues in many government schools." For an interview, please contact Professor Kim Beswick at UNSW (Sydney) on MOBILE or at email. Emeritus Professor Robert Hattam, University of South Australia - "We need a Minister who can govern for all the country and not just for the wealthy families" "The acting Education Minister, Stuart Robert, with his comments both last week and today, continues a long tradition by Federal Liberal Education Ministers," says Professor Hattam. "Rather than admit that the federal policy regime is failing they resort to blaming public school teachers. "Last week the Minister was defending a funding model that demonstrably contributes to systemic educational inequality in Australia and hence with a back hand blames public schools. "Such tactics by Robert either demonstrates he is still to get his head around the Education portfolio, or, more likely, he is proving himself worthy as poster boy for the private school sector, who on the whole serve the wealthy families of Australia at the expense of public schools. "If he was prepared to really grasp the crisis in our school system then he'd note that Australia, as a system, has declining student achievement, increasing educational inequality (we now have one of the most unequal system in the OECD) and multiple crises related to the teaching workforce including large numbers of young teachers leaving the profession before 5 years service, and declining number of teachers wanting to be school leaders. "And COVID has only intensified those problem. As a connected set of issues, I want to argue that the inequality problem is key. Fix the inequality problem and we could improve student achievement, and this too would ameliorate the workforce issues somewhat. "But then Robert has to play that old card trick again, to deflect attention away to yet another social policy failure by this government. Sorry, but can-do capitalism and right wing personal responsibility just don't work in education policy. We need a Minister who can govern for all the country and not just for the wealthy families." For an interview, please contact Professor Robert Hattam at the University of South Australia on MOBILE or at email. Associate Professor Rachel Wilson, University of Sydney - "These comments aren't based on data" "The Ministers' comments are ignorant and not based on any data, " says Assoc Prof Wilson. "There is repeated and recent evidence that public, government schools perform at least as well as, and in some cases exceed, non-government schools. "It beggars belief that we can have a minister who propagates such falsehoods, and fuels partisan approaches to schooling, rather than attend to his responsibility to all Australian students." For an interview, please contact Associate Professor Rachel Wilson at the University of Sydney on MOBILE or at email. 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