Research shows emojis can help students accept online feedback and motivate them to do better during home-schooling.
Remote and flexible learning has forced educators to adapt the way they teach and give feedback, with the classroom moved ...
The latest Resilient Youth: State of the Nation Report has just been released, and reveals that while Australia’s young people are still struggling mentally, for the first time since reporting began in 2019, student wellbeing has stabilised or sli...
Schools across NSW are opening their gates for the public to access outdoor facilities outside of school hours every day of the week, in a trial allowing families and communities greater access to green space.
In part one of a two-part series, we chat to Dr Colin Webber, the Dean of SAE University College, about the groundbreaking early pilot work being done here in Australia regarding the ethical use of generative AI in education and its exciting role ...
In a world of 10-second sound bites and ever scrolling feeds, one national writing competition is reminding us of the power of words, and the voices of young Australians.
Launching sensitive conversations with students that raise concerns about child sexual abuse can alter lives – but they can also be easily tucked in the ‘too hard’ basket, deemed too awkward or problematic to initiate in schools.
On a Saturday morning this March, my 9-year-old son Raymond Hsu emerged from an exam room at Queen Margaret College in Wellington, New Zealand.
Exclusion and bullying of students with disability is on the rise in Australia’s schools, with three in four impacted in 2024, a new survey has revealed.
It is a well known fact that Australians gamble more than any other nation on the planet. What’s less well known is that one in three Aussie kids aged between 12 and 17 gamble.
Buckminster Fuller predicted in 1960 that human knowledge doubled approximately every century. Today, some futurologists postulate that human knowledge doubles every 12 months and, in some domains, every 12 hours.
Teachers have been urged to be vigilant in looking for signs of mental health problems in children who have hearing difficulties and struggle with reading, as world-first Australian research finds an alarming link.
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