The West Australian Government has axed more education assistant jobs in public schools than it said it would cut.
PERTH, April 24 - In 2013, Education Minister Peter Collier, pictured, said 350 education assistants would go, but it has now ...
For boys who have absorbed misogynistic views and warped ideas about masculinity, how can schools dismantle the manosphere’s influence from within the classroom?
School camps are a vital part of the Australian educational landscape, providing essential opportunities for students to build resilience, independence, and social skills outside the classroom – yet their very existence is coming under increasing ...
Once a lighthouse state showing the nation how the explicit teaching of reading could be improved at scale across public schools, South Australia has lost its way under a government that is straying from the evidence base about what works best, a ...
In many households, fuel price apps are getting a serious workout as families struggle to find affordable fuel. The impact is being felt by teachers across the country, with those in regional centres and country areas being particularly hard hit.
With the concerning rise in the influence of the ‘manosphere’, teachers are reporting a corresponding spiralling of gender attitudes in the classroom, with young people experiencing higher rates of peer-to-peer abuse.
In a first for the state, NSW public school parents and students will be asked to sign or acknowledge a new Student Behaviour Code of Conduct (the Code) at the start of every school year.
The Australian Education Union Victorian branch executive has voted to reject an Allan Labor Government proposal of a 17 per cent pay increase over four years and hold firm, it said, for a better deal.
Sleep quality is often reduced to a simple question of ‘enough’ or ‘not enough’, but research provides metrics to objectively assess sleep quality.
Commercially-motivated influencers in the manopshere are indoctrinating Australian boys, teaching them to reject the authority of teachers and the ‘woke’ school system, one expert has warned.
The excessive and unstructured use of AI in Australian schools risks derailing students’ acquisition of foundational skills and knowledge and is setting young brains up for atrophy, an expert has warned.