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Queensland schools go under the microscope

Fears teachers resources will be lost as Queensland Education Department replaces learning platform

Fears teachers resources will be lost as Queensland Education Department replaces learning platform ThuThursday 4 The Queensland Education Department is replacing its digital learning platform. ( Print text only Cancel Queensland teachers are calling for certainty amid fears lesson resources could be lost as the Education Department replaces its digital learning platform. Key points: The Education Department is replacing its 18-year-old online learning system The Queensland Teachers Union is calling for the department to centrally fund training and ensure resources won t be lost in transition The Education Department says the new system has vast improvements An Education Department spokesperson confirmed The Learning Place, an 18-year-old system used by Queensland state schools, was being replaced with QLearn, an updated system with vastly improved functions .

Qld teachers fail in bid to boycott NAPLAN

How students who flunk English, maths still become teachers

Generic image of teacher teaching students inside school classroom. Education by Kylie Lang Premium Content Subscriber only School leavers who failed Year 12 English and maths will be fast-tracked into a teaching degree under a controversial new Queensland course. The diploma of educational studies at Griffith College, in partnership with Griffith University, ignores ATAR results and applicants only need a Queensland Certificate of Education (QCE) or to have passed three of any six subjects, which may or may not include English and maths but can include applied subjects such as fashion and furniture skills. School leavers who flunked English, maths and science in Year 12 could soon be fronting classrooms as primary teachers.

Winners and losers: Unions who took biggest hits in 2020

Premium Content Subscriber only One of Queensland s powerful unions suffered a significant hit to its membership while others recorded mammoth uptakes amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Almost 1200 people left the Electrical Trades Union in Queensland during the 2019-20 financial year, while 372 left the CFMEU. However the Queensland Nurses and Midwives Union welcomed 3137 new members - the largest increase of all unions in Queensland. The SDA, which is still on a holiday from Labor s Right Faction, recorded the second biggest increase with 1603 people signing up. Members of Electrical Trades Union are seen during the annual Labour Day march in Brisbane. Picture: AAP Image/Darren England

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