Students who struggle with literacy and numeracy, or who have a disability or learning difficulty, will suffer the most if Malcolm Turnbull scraps Gonski funding after 2017, an AEU survey of principals has found.
The AEU’s State of Our Schools survey for 2017 found that 90 per cent of principals whose schools received Gonski funding reported it was making a ‘significant difference’ to their schools.
However only 19 per cent said the funding received so far was enough to meet the needs of all their students – and were concerned many students would continue to miss out if funding was stopped.
The survey results are being released in Canberra today as part of the arrival at Parliament House of the two ‘Gonski Buses’ which have spent the last three weeks visiting schools and communities across Australia.
AEU Federal President Correna Haythorpe will lead a delegation of principals and teachers at Parliament House to highlight the importance of Gonski funding.
Ms Haythorpe said the findings were proof Gonski needs-based funding was making a difference, but that schools needed the full six years of Gonski funding to support their students.
“Gonski funding is turning lives around and lifting results for students across Australia. We need the full six years of funding through to 2019 so every child who needs help at school can get it.
“The only reason Malcolm Turnbull ignores the evidence Gonski is working is because he does not care about students who have the greatest needs in our schools.
“His plan to stop Gonski at the end of this year will cost schools $3.8 billion in extra resources which are due to be delivered through the Gonski agreements.
“Malcolm Turnbull needs to tell us which students he wants to miss out on support at school.”
When the State of Our Schools survey asked public school principals which groups of students would miss out if Gonski funding was not continued in 2018 and 2019 they said:
The survey, of 1428 principals across Australia, also found high class sizes, growing staff shortages in schools across Australia, and principals having difficulty filling maths, science and technology teaching positions.
Key findings include:
“It is clear that a lack of resources, and shortages of staff, remain major issues for schools, ” Ms Haythorpe said.
“We are seeing schools doing fantastic things with the Gonski funding they have received so far, but about two thirds of the extra funding schools need is to be delivered in 2018 and 2019.
“Schools still don’t know how they will be funded after this year, because Malcolm Turnbull will not release any details of his proposed funding model.
“No state or territory government supports cuts to Gonski, and Malcolm Turnbull needs to listen to them and give our schools the resources they need.
“Anything less is failing our students.”
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