School funding In 2010 the
Gillard government commissioned
David Gonski to the chair a committee to review funding of Australian schools. Entitled the
Gonski Report, through the
Council of Australian Governments the Gillard government sought to implement the National Education Reform Agreement that would deliver an 9.4 billion school funding plan. Despite some states and territories becoming parties to the Agreement, the plan was shelved following the
2013 federal election. The
Turnbull government commissioned Gonski in 2017 to chair the independent Review to Achieve Educational Excellence in Australian Schools, commonly called Gonski 2.0. The government published the report on 30 April 2018. Following negotiation,
bilateral agreements between the Commonwealth of Australia with each state and territory commenced on 1 January 2019, with the exception of Victoria, whose bilateral agreement commenced on 1 February 2019. The funding agreements provide states with funding for government schools (20 percent) and non-government schools (80 percent) taking into consideration annual changes in enrolment numbers, indexation and student or school characteristics. A National School Resourcing Board was charged with the responsibility of independently reviewing each state's compliance with the funding agreement(s). In 2024–25, the Australian Government invested A$53 billion (7.2% of its
federal budget) in education. In January 2025 South Australia and Victoria signed on to the new school funding agreement with the
Albanese government (after the previous agreement had expired in 2024 NSW signed up in early March, and Queensland was the last state to make the commitment, on 24 March 2025. Under the BFSA, states are required to increase their funding of public schools to 75 per cent of the minimum amount recommended by the 2012 Gonski Review and Gonski 2.0 per the SRS.
Indigenous primary and secondary education Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children are at a significant disadvantage when compared to non-Indigenous Australians across a number of key school educational measures. In 2008, the
Council of Australian Governments announced seven "
Closing the Gap" targets, of which four related to education, namely: • participation in early childhood education: with the goal of 95 per cent of all Indigenous four-year-olds enrolled in early childhood education by 2025; • reading, writing and numeracy levels: with the goal to halve the gap for Indigenous students in reading, writing and numeracy within a decade (by 2018); • Year 12 attainment: with the goal to halve the gap for Indigenous 20–24 year olds in year 12 or equivalent attainment rates (by 2020); and • school attendance: with the aim to close the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous school attendance within five years (by 2018). , the target results were:
Bilingual education in schools Bilingual education in Australia may be divided into three different types, or target audiences, each having somewhat different purposes:
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples; immigrant (
CALD) groups; and English speakers looking to add another language to their education. The first two are interested in language maintenance and
language revitalisation for ensuing generations. The first recorded government support for bilingual education came under the
Menzies government in 1950, when the first government schools for Aboriginal students were opened at four sites in the
Northern Territory (NT), where instruction "should include English Language, Native Language (where appropriate)". Policies and practices varied in the following years, with the first five pilot programs introduced in 1973 after the
Whitlam government came to power and brought in new federal policies. or "both-ways" learning. Other programs included language maintenance and language revitalisation in remote schools across the NT. Then on 24 August 2005, the Minister for Employment, Education and Training announced that the government would be "revitalising bi-lingual education" at 15 Community Education Centres:
Alekarenge,
Angurugu,
Borroloola,
Gapuwiyak,
Gunbalanya,
Kalkaringi,
Lajamanu,
Maningrida,
Milingimbi,
Ramingining,
Ngukurr, Shepherdson College,
Numbulwar,
Yirrkala, and
Yuendumu. This revitalisation is conceived as part of an effort aimed at "providing effective education from pre-school through to senior secondary at each of the Territory's 15 Community Education Centres". However, in October 2008, the first year of
NAPLAN testing, Areyonga School, in
Areyonga, was still using both-ways education in August 2023, 50 years since it had begun there, teaching in
Pitjantjatjara language and culture. In March 2025, Yuendemu School celebrated 50 years of bilingual education. The
Warlpiri language has been taught alongside English first by Tess Napurrurla Ross and then her daughter Theresa Napurrurla Ross over these years. , bilingual education funding in the Northern Territory has been merged into general school budgets, meaning that each school makes decisions about funding such programmes. Nevertheless, Australia maintains one of the highest concentrations of religious schools, when compared with other OECD countries. Historically, the teaching of religion in Australian government schools has been a contentious issue and was a motivator for the foundation of the government schooling system. While the
National School Chaplaincy Program provides an overarching framework based on
pastoral care, not
religious instruction, the practices and policies of religious instruction in Australian schools vary significantly from state to state. In New South Wales, the
Special Religious Education classes are held in the government school sector that enable students to learn about the
beliefs,
practices,
values and
morals of a chosen religion. In Queensland, religious organisations may apply to
school principals and, if approved, deliver approved religious instruction programs in government schools. In Victoria, legislation prescribes that government schools must not promote any particular religious practice, denomination or sect, and must be open to adherents of any philosophy, religion or faith. However, individual school principals may permit approved organisations to deliver non-compulsory
special religious instruction classes of no more than 30 minutes per week per student, during lunchtime or in the hour before or after usual school hours. In Western Australia, both special religious education (not part of the general curriculum) and general religious education (as part of the general curriculum) are offered in government schools.
School violence In July 2009, the Queensland Minister for Education said that the rising levels of
violence in schools in the state were "totally unacceptable" and that not enough had been done to combat violent behaviour. In Queensland, 55,000 school students were suspended in 2008, nearly a third of which were for "physical misconduct". In South Australia, 175 violent attacks against students or staff were recorded in 2008. Students were responsible for deliberately causing 3,000 injuries reported by teachers over two years from 2008 to 2009. As of 2024, school violence is still prevalent. In an annual survey by the Australian Catholic University (ACU) 48 per cent of school principals reported having seen or experienced an event of physical violence. == Tertiary education ==