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National curriculum reignites history debates Weâre sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss Kevin DonnellySenior Research Fellow, Australian Catholic University May 18, 2021 â 5.30am May 18, 2021 â 5.30am Save Normal text size Advertisement The release of the revised national history curriculum has reignited the perennial debate about what students should be taught about the nationâs history and what constitutes the proper balance between what Geoffrey Blainey describes as a âblack armbandâ and a âthree cheers viewâ. Those defending the revised curriculumâs heavy focus on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture, history and spirituality argue the âthree cheers viewâ has long dominated and that it is now time to redress the imbalance. ....
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Premium Content Subscriber only A Mackay school has topped the list for the rate of growing enrolment numbers across the wider Mackay Isaac Whitsunday region. Farleigh State School had a 260 per cent increase in student numbers over the five years from 2016 to 2021, data from the Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority has shown. Its total pupils soared from just 20 to 72. Dundula State School students laying a wreath at the Mackay Anzac Day Main Service, 2021. Picture: Heidi Petith The next fastest growing schools were St Lawrence State School which more than doubled its students from five to 12 and Dundula State School which went from 41 pupils to 88. ....
Queensland teachers call for overhaul of NAPLAN tests Weâre sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss Save Normal text size Advertisement Queensland Teachersâ Union members are calling for an overhaul, or even a halt, of NAPLAN as parents consider taking their children out of this yearâs tests. Year 3, 5 and 9 students across 1700 Queensland schools will sit NAPLAN, which tests reading, writing, language and numeracy nationally, from Tuesday. The national NAPLAN system has been labelled âbrokenâ. Credit:Rodger Cummins Assessments were cancelled last year due to the coronavirus pandemic. This year, 70 per cent of schools in Australia, including 1151 Queensland schools, will participate in NAPLAN Online. ....
In a letter to its members, the QTU called on its members to send a “clear message” that the test needed to be changed. “Widespread disengagement from Naplan sends a clear message that parents and teachers don’t value the test in its current form and oppose its negative consequences for students and school communities.” QTU president Cresta Richardson said the union had recently conducted a survey of their members, and found they overwhelmingly believed Naplan was “broken” and that it needs to be “overhauled.” “Basically, the test is not fit for purpose. “When the test came out 12 years ago, it was supposed to be a low-stakes diagnostic test, apparently. And now, 12 years down the track, it hasn’t been revisited, hasn’t been reframed, hasn’t been revised, it’s just the same old thing every year.” ....