ACARA

Change doesn’t happen by doing more of the same

By Nikki Brunker

Jason Clare’s announced plans to dissolve ACARA, AITSL, ESA, and AERO, into the Teaching and Learning Commission raises

New Super Bureaucracy for Schools: Visionary Reform or Risky Gamble?

By Glenn C Savage

Federal Education Minister Jason Clare has unveiled the biggest shake-up in schooling policy in decades, announcing plans to

Science : this new syllabus is so last century

By Christine Preston

Imagine asking a five year old to name basic body parts. That kid’s known an eye from an

Is the NAPLAN results delay about politics or precision?

By Greg Thompson

The decision announced yesterday by ACARA to delay the release of preliminary NAPLAN data is perplexing. The justification

The insidious way the new curriculum undermines democracy

By Peter Brett

The public’s mind is focused upon politics in the final week of a bruising election campaign. The language

The truth: what our students really learn about Anzac Day

By Alison Bedford and Naomi Barnes

Students taught “hatred” of the nation (even the PM thinks so). Teachers are duds. That’s the backdrop for

Will the curriculum really embrace the true spirit of Anzac?

By Naomi Barnes

Q and A with Anna Clark, author of Making Australian History The “wokeness” of Australia’s National Curriculum has again made headlines and again it is more electioneering. On Friday a Nine newspapers headline claimed the revised version of National Curriculum will elevate Western and Christian heritage. Crikey picked up on the Sydney Morning Herald headline

Alan Tudge’s understanding of our history deserves a fail

By Keith Heggart, Peter Brett and Sophie Fenton

The Federal Minister for Education Alan Tudge says the draft History and Civics and Citizenship curriculum is not

It’s anarchy in England. Australia’s ITE must now steer clear.

By Viv Ellis

The announcement of the Quality Initial Teacher Education Review (QITER) and publication of the expert group’s discussion paper reminded some in the initial teacher education (ITE) and research communities of the continuing influence of England on Australian education policy as well as this country’s own unique history of a hundred and one damnations in teacher