freediver
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http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,21739395-5006785,00.html
STUDENTS in disadvantaged suburbs are bypassing local government schools and travelling to schools in more affluent areas where they achieve higher results. Twenty-five years after Victorian parents were given a choice in where to send their children, government high schools in middle-class areas are flourishing and schools in poorer suburbs of Melbourne are turning into ghettos.
Research by University of Melbourne associate professor of education Stephen Lamb, published today, finds students at bigger schools achieve better results in statewide tests.
The average score in the state general achievement test on general knowledge, literacy and numeracy skills is 59.4 per cent for students from poorer suburbs attending schools out of their area, compared with 50.5 per cent for those attending local schools.
Schemes like this in the US have seen soft drink manufacturers sponsoring schools in exchange for softdrink vending machines in the classroom.
Govt school sponsorship criticised
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Govt-school-sponsorship-criticised/2007/06/06/1181089127892.html
The federal government has been accused of trying to shirk its school funding responsibilities after Education Minister Julie Bishop flagged corporate sponsorship of public schools.
ALP vows no private school funding cuts
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/ALP-vows-no-private-school-funding-cuts/2007/06/13/1181414342963.html
Federal opposition education spokesman Stephen Smith has again moved to quell fears a Labor government would strip funds from elite private schools.
The Independent Schools Council of Australia is concerned a Labor government would take account of income from private sources when determining funding, which could leave some schools worse off, The Australian reported.
Mr Smith said no schools would be worse off under a Labor government because current funding indexing arrangements would remain in place.
And Mr Smith renewed his criticism of former Labor leader Mark Latham's plan to reduce public funding to some wealthy private schools.
Business-sponsored schools plan floated
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Businesssponsored-schools-plan-floated/2007/06/21/1182019208845.html
Australia's education crisis will deepen unless England's system of business-sponsored schools is adopted to properly equip students for the workforce, an education expert says.
Professor Brian Caldwell, who made headlines last year when he said thousands of government-funded schools should be bulldozed because they were in disrepair, is now targeting public school curriculums, saying schools should take private sector funds to overhaul their teaching programs and specialise in specific teaching areas.
Prof Caldwell has championed a system in England where 2,700 of the 3,100 state secondary schools have partnerships with business entities to specialise in areas such as sport, engineering, business, technology and language.
Each school offers at least one of 11 specialisations, which may involve more than one business partnership, while continuing to offer a general school curriculum.
Labor wants to rank schools on scores
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Labor-wants-to-rank-schools-on-scores/2007/06/25/1182623772896.html
All states will be asked to rank their schools, so the performance of students in literacy and numeracy tests can be compared and assessed, if Labor wins the federal election.
Fairfax newspapers have reported that most state Labor governments oppose school ranking tables but opposition education spokesman Stephen Smith said the results of standardised tests in years 3, 5, 7 and 9 should be made public.
This would identify struggling schools, assist public policy decisions and identify the need for early intervention, Mr Smith said.
Nurture elitism, says US thinker
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,22194712-601,00.html
CONTROVERSIAL American political scientist Charles Murray is urging Australians to ditch egalitarianism as a central tenet of the national culture and to recognise that the country's future is in the hands of the best and brightest.
Dr Murray will tell a forum in Sydney next week that the smartest young Australians are being short-changed by an education system that puts a child's emotional wellbeing ahead of learning.
"We're taking these bright kids and coddling the little darlings," Dr Murray told The Australian. "We placate them because we're a society which says nobody can be stupid, even if they are."
Dr Murray is best known for his book The Bell Curve, co-authored with Richard Herrnstein, which caused a storm by linking race and IQ.
"Australians talk about this tall-poppy syndrome without understanding where it comes from," he said. "It is based on the idea that we're all equal. Well, I've got news for you -- we're not all equal and the sooner we accept that, the better. There's nothing wrong with being elitist and we need to come to terms with that and embrace it."
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