Queensland Minister for Education, Training and Employment, John-Paul. Langbroek, has announced the finalists for the 51st annual Queensland Training Awards.

“These awards are about recognising the state’s best employers, apprentices, trainees, teachers, trainers and vocational students for the work they do to take Queensland forward,” Mr Langbroek said.

“I’m thrilled to be able to acknowledge the people in our vocational education and training sector who are working hard to create a better Queensland for the future.” 

A total of 57 finalists across eleven categories will vie for awards at the state final presentation dinner in Brisbane on Friday 14 September 2012. 

Winners at the state level have the opportunity to progress to the Australian Training Awards held in Melbourne on Friday 16 November. 

Innovation & Business Skills Australia (IBSA), one of eleven Industry Skills Councils authorized by the Australian Government to provide a voice on vocational education and training issues, is seeking to appoint new board directors.

A new partnership between the Federal Government and Sydney universities aims boost the number of students from Greater Western Sydney going to university.

Education unions are continuing a campaign against the Victorian Government’s plans to cut nearly $300 million from the state’s 18 TAFE institutes.

 

A protest rally was jointly organised by the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) Victorian Division and the Australian Education Union (AEU) in central Melbourne on Thursday 2 August.
 
Colin Long, NTEU Victorian President, said that more details were emerging daily about the ramifications including job losses, a reduction in courses and increased fees. He said RMIT’s TAFE is slated to lose $20 million of its public funding, with over 150 jobs to go.
 
“RMIT started life as a ‘workingman’s’ college. These cuts are an attack on its fundamental purpose. They’re bad news for students, bad news for staff and bad, bad news for the future of Victoria.”
 
Yesterday’s rally was the fourth in a series of protests against the TAFE cuts being organised across Melbourne, culminating in a mass rally on Thursday, August 16 at the State Library.
 
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Around 10,000 schools across Australia will receive a DVD aimed at helping school children understand, accept and support children with an Autism Spectrum Disorder. 

The Federal Government will provide $4 million to develop new online toolkits to help parents, teachers, and students deal with school bullying.

The NSW government wants to make it easier to fire underperforming teachers and more difficult to enter the profession.

A new report, entitled An Independent analysis of higher education funding approach, by Ernst & Young shows that funding for university student places will be 10.1 per cent or almost $2,000 higher in 2013 .

A report by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) shows that men continue to fare worse than women in education.

Universities need to be more aggressive in fighting red tape, funding shortages and incoherent policy, UNSW

The Queensland Education, Training and Employment Minister John-Paul Langbroek has announced a series of measures to reduce expenditure in his portfolio.

Three regional universities will receive $19.6 million in federal government funding to improve their research capacity and drive stronger performance outcomes.

The Western Australian Education Minister Peter Collier has announced 48 more schools that have been selected to become Independent Public Schools to start in 2013, bringing the overall total in the reform of WA’s education system to 255 (one third of Western Australia’s public schools).

The NSW Government has appointed Professor Jim Pratley to conduct a year-long independent Review of Agricultural Education and Training.

The Federal Minister for Early Childhood and Child Care, Kate Ellis has announced a consultation on childcare and early learning services, focusing on funding for services in urban, regional, remote and Indigenous communities under the Budget Based Funded (BBF) program. 

 

“This $57 million program supports more than 300 various services around Australia and plays an important role in ensuring families have access to an early childhood service where the market would otherwise fail to provide one,” Ms Ellis said.

 

“Importantly, the consultation I’ve announced today follows the Government's commitment of $59.4 million to improve the quality of centre-based BBF services, including ongoing funding to raise staff qualifications and support building maintenance.” 

 

A discussion paper entitled Quality Early Childhood Education and Care for Children in Regional, Remote and Indigenous Communities: A Review of the Budget Based Funding Program will be the focus for the consultation

 

The discussion paper looks at what is working and what can be improved, and the consultation will include meetings for stakeholders and interested parties. 

 

The discussion paper and factsheets are available at www.deewr.gov.au/bbfreview

The 2011 National Assessment Program in ICT (NAP – ICT) Literacy Report has been released, providing an overview of how Australian students are performing in the digital age.

Learning how to run, jump, kick and catch are skills many children are struggling to accomplish, with major implications for their general health, according to a landmark study led by the University of Sydney.

The Australian Maritime College (AMC) has joined forces with two major interstate maritime training providers to raise the profile of seafarer training and support the Federal Government’s shipping policy reform.

Five hundred of the nation's most skilled students have been recognised for their efforts in vocational education and training in schools.

The South Australian Employment, Higher Education and Skills Minister, Tom Kenyonhas announced that 26  STEM field courses identified as priorities for the State are now fee-free for the first time under the Skills for All reform of vocational education and training. 

The Australian Workforce and Productivity Agency has released a discussion paper which examines skills and workforce development needs arising four different scenarios for Australia’s economic future.

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