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Australian government strategy succeeds:
Private school enrolments rise at expense of public schools
By Erika Zimmer
15 March 2001
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The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) released figures
last month showing student enrolments in private schools have
reached record levels. The figures testify to the success of a
key strategy, pursued by Labor governments throughout the 1980s
and early 1990s and the Howard government since 1996: the undermining
of public education and the promotion of a user-pays
system.
Thirty one percent of all Australian students now attend private
schools, representing an historic shift away from the public system.
In 1949, the proportion of private students was 20 percent. By
1980, it had risen to 22 percent, followed by a leap to 28 percent
by 1990. In 1999 the figure was 30 percent, rising another one
percent during the next year.
The deliberate weakening of the public school system has been
carried out under the cynical banner of free choice.
Parents have been encouraged to conclude that taking responsibility
for their children's education, and providing them with the best
possible standards, means sending them to private schools. Despite
the hardships associated with paying hefty private school feeswhich
continue to rise notwithstanding huge subsidies from both federal
and state governmentsmore and more parents are deciding
to opt for fee-paying schools.
A vicious circle has been set in motion. As parents remove
their children from public schools, these schools attract less
funding. The range of subjects offered, new equipment purchases,
specialist teaching staff, building maintenance all decline, and
more children are withdrawn. Finally, only those who simply cannot
afford private fees remain and the school becomes a place of last
resort. The ABS figures give a sense of the pressures that parents
are facing.
Of course the government's privatisation strategy is never
openly discussed. None of the political parties, or the teacher
unions or the media ever challenge the underlying assumption:
that quality education requires a competitive environment, where
public and private schools compete for market share.
To the extent that public enrolments are falling, blame is laid
on the public schools for failing to promote themselves and advertise
more aggressively.
But the decline in public school numbers is a direct consequence
of federal and state government policies. In 1996 the Howard government
introduced the Enrolment Benchmark Adjustment (EBA) formula, which
financially penalises a public school whenever a student transfers
to the private system, even if the school's overall population
actually increases. The EBA has served to institutionalise the
promotion of private education. Since 1998 it has cost public
schools in New South Wales (NSW) alone $54 million.
Last year's federal States Grants Bill showed an even more
blatant preference for private schooling. It allocated the bulk
of its $22 billion funding$14 billionto private schools.
Public schools, catering for nearly 70 per cent of students, were
allocated $7.6 billion.
Since 1996 private schools have been completely deregulated
and all previous conditions on funding eligibilitysize,
location and curriculumabolished. Private schools, many
of them affiliated to various religious organisations, have sprung
up with as few as 10 pupils. They have been accorded generous
government subsidies while public schools, providing for hundreds
of students, have been deemed unviable and forced to shut down.
In the past year, nine government schools have been closed and
14 private schools opened.
Predictably, teachers are beginning to drift away from the
public system and into the private schools. Between 1999 and 2000
the number of teachers in private schools jumped by 2,207 (3.4
percent) to 67,449, while the number of government school teachers
increased by just 128 to 150,610.
Not only are teacher numbers up in private schools, but they
now have slightly better student-teachers ratios1 to 14.8
students, compared to 1 to 14.9. The ratio is significantly better
in non-Catholic private schools, averaging about 1 to 13. This
is under conditions where public schools cater for a far higher
proportion of disadvantaged children, and children with learning
difficulties.
Education researcher, Barbara Preston, told the Sydney Morning
Herald that one of the reasons teachers were moving into the
private schools was because the increased government funding allowed
these schools to pay higher salaries. The drift will further accelerate
the decline of the public system.
Poorer schools in working-class suburbs and schools in country
areas are consequently facing a chronic shortage of teachers.
Many have resorted to holding combined classes, or sending children
into the playground during class time, with minimum supervision.
The media has taken to highlighting, rather than covering up,
these problems, with the aim of scaring more parents into transferring
their children to private schools. Regular reports have appeared
contrasting public schools, lacking electricity, decent toilet
facilities, casual replacement teachers and adequate classrooms,
with the lavish facilities that exist in exclusive private schools.
Murdoch's Daily Telegraph, for example, recently publicised
a private school boasting a music centre, complete with orchestra
and ensemble areas, 42 practice rooms, a drama studio, a 50-metre
pool, rowing club and tennis courts. The school was about to be
handed a $529,750 no-strings-attached government subsidy to help
pay off a $1.7 million loan to purchase further facilities.
The decline in public school enrollments, coupled with deteriorating
conditions, has set the stage for a new round of attacks. In the
past month, the Labor government in NSW has seized upon the ABS
figures to argue for the amalgamation or closure of 10 Sydney
high schools in a major education restructure. An announcement
is set to be made on March 25, the second anniversary of the government's
re-election. While keeping the specific details of the plan secret,
the government intends to rush it through, overturning a legal
requirement that two years of community consultation
take place before any school is closed.
See Also:
Australian government
to pour billions into private schools
[18 October 2000]
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