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270k new students for public schools in next decade Vs 11k in Catholic sector, claims new forecast

Public school enrolments are forecast to increase by 23 times more than Catholic school enrolments over the next decade, raising hard questions about the assumptions behind the Morrison government’s $4.6 billion private school funding deal.

The forecasts were provided by the Federal Department of Education and Training under Freedom of Information. They show that, in real terms, the public school sector will grow by more than 270,000 extra students in the next ten years, as opposed to only 11,000 extra students for the Catholic sector.

In Victoria, public school enrolments are forecast to grow at almost 10 times that of the Catholic sector over the next decade, while in Queensland public school enrolments are forecast to grow at almost eight times that of the Catholic sector.

Australian Education Union Federal President Correna Haythorpe said that despite funding cuts imposed by the Morrison government, public school enrolment figures were a strong vote of confidence by parents in excellent high-quality public education delivered by committed, highly-qualified teachers.

“These federal school enrolment forecasts demonstrate the complete disconnect between Scott Morrison’s $4.6 billion private school spending splurge and the stark reality of school enrolments,” Ms Haythorpe said.

“The Prime Minister clearly is not looking at actual school student enrolment figures.”

“This data shows that enrolment growth in Catholic schools is stagnant across the country and in some cases, particularly New South Wales and South Australia, dropping quite markedly.” Despite this, the Morrison government is pumping in billions of extra dollars in special deals for the Catholic sector.

“This is in contrast to strong projected enrolment growth in public schools across the nation. This is clear evidence that, despite funding cuts imposed by the Morrison government, public schools provide excellent high-quality education delivered by committed, highly-qualified teachers,” Ms Haythorpe said.

“Private schools have already been handed $1.9 billion in capital works special deal funding by the Morrison government. However public schools do not get a single dollar from the Commonwealth for classrooms, libraries and other state of the art learning facilities,” Ms Haythorpe said.

“Yet, as these enrolment figures show, public school enrolment growth far outstrips that in the Catholic school sector. If Scott Morrison was serious about sector-blind needs-based funding, he would restore the funding cuts and create a public school capital works fund of at least $300m per year, indexed to enrolment growth.”

AEU said that the student enrolment projections revealed:

  • Nationally, public school enrolments are projected to increase by 23 times more than Catholic school enrolments over the next decade. In real terms this means more than 270,000 extra students in the public school sector, as opposed to only 11,000 extra students in the Catholic sector
  • In Victoria, public school enrolments are forecast to grow at almost 10 times that in the Catholic sector over the next decade. In real terms this means there will be 118,149 more students in Victorian public schools as opposed to just 12,607 additional students in Victorian Catholic schools
  • In NSW we see 30,089 extra students in public school sector, as opposed to a drop of 8412 students in the Catholic sector
  • In Queensland, public school enrolments are forecast to grow at almost eight times that in the Catholic sector over the next decade (55,521 extra students versus 7451)
  • In the ACT, public school enrolments are forecast to grow at nineteen times that in the Catholic sector over the next decade (11687 extra students versus 498)
  • In South Australia, we see almost 10,896 extra students in public school sector, as opposed to a drop of 5137 students in the Catholic sector
  • In WA, public school enrolments are forecast to grow at almost nine times that in the Catholic sector over the next decade (44,912 extra students versus 5456)
  • In Tasmania, public school enrolments are forecast to drop at two times that in the Catholic sector over the next decade (2449 fewer students versus 1245).
  • In the NT, public school enrolments are forecast to grow at more than four times that in the Catholic sector over the next decade (1702 vs 347)

Ms Haythorpe said public schools had been forgotten by the Morrison government when it came to funding.

“Sixty-five per cent of students in Australia attend public schools. As these figures show, with public school enrolments growing at ten or even twenty times that of Catholic schools, more and more public school students will be short-changed by the Morrison government,” Ms Haythorpe said.

“There are state elections looming in Victoria and New South Wales, as well as a federal election. Public school funding is going to be a critical issue in all of these,” Ms Haythorpe said. “Parents in public school communities understand the importance of fully funding public schools, and they vote.”

“Current federal funding arrangements will leave nearly nine in ten public schools in Australia without enough funding to meet the needs of each student by 2023. It’s clear what needs to happen. The Morrison government must lift its contribution to public school funding,” Ms Haythorpe said.

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2 Comments

  1. Would be nice to see this story with Not-Public-Not-Catholic-But-Independant schools included in the figures. There are plenty of Independent Schools that are benefiting from this funding increase, but only reporting on student figures for Catholic Schools completely skews the data. Unless that’s what you are trying to do for the sake of a headline??

  2. Hi Michael, thanks for your comment. These figures only included public and catholic school enrolment numbers. However, according to the Independent School Council of Australia, projected enrolment growth for independent schools between 2017 and 2028 is 88,779 (169 new schools), while catholic school projected enrolment growth is 68,623 (156 new schools) and public school projected enrolment growth is 500,053 (1,319 new schools). The forecast discussed in this article is more recent but I will enquire with the Federal Department of Education and Training as to why they differ so much. It is clear that in both forecasts that public schools have a higher rate of predicted enrolment growth.

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