When I started school in the 1970s, local Australian schools were free, compulsory and secular. We all went to the local public school, or almost all of us. The Australia we knew was proud of being egalitarian, and relatively free of religious conflict. The main issue was privilege: some wealthy private schools, more or less religious, could claim to provide an education superior both to the public system and to parochial Catholic schools.1 page(s
The spurious mystique surrounding private schooling should be removed, argues David Burchell NO PRIZ...
In the public policy discourse about vouchers, many Catholic school advocates have been aligned with...
The period from the late 1970s to the late 1980s were transition years for most public (government) ...
Fewer Australians now practise a religion or believe in God than at any time in our past. Yet our go...
Government subsidies have provided a major source of funds to private schools in Australia for three...
• More than 1.1 million students (out of a total student population of 3.4 million) ...
Author and academic Marion Maddox argues in her latest book that the proliferation of faith-based sc...
In Australia's public schools, students are now routinely exposed to evangelism from very conservati...
Deb Wilkinson, Richard Denniss and Andrew MacIntosh highlight the need to tighten the current accou...
The nineteenth century radically transformed education from a church function to a state duty. Durin...
Australia has been touted as a model for how the United States might benefit by undertaking public f...
A longitudinal data set is used to explore questions about the choice of type of school-public, Cat...
Like many of the English-speaking market democracies, Australia and, perhaps to a lesser extent the ...
It is now taken for granted that everyone should have access to education so that educational succes...
Private schools in Australia receive significant public funding, but their determination to concentr...
The spurious mystique surrounding private schooling should be removed, argues David Burchell NO PRIZ...
In the public policy discourse about vouchers, many Catholic school advocates have been aligned with...
The period from the late 1970s to the late 1980s were transition years for most public (government) ...
Fewer Australians now practise a religion or believe in God than at any time in our past. Yet our go...
Government subsidies have provided a major source of funds to private schools in Australia for three...
• More than 1.1 million students (out of a total student population of 3.4 million) ...
Author and academic Marion Maddox argues in her latest book that the proliferation of faith-based sc...
In Australia's public schools, students are now routinely exposed to evangelism from very conservati...
Deb Wilkinson, Richard Denniss and Andrew MacIntosh highlight the need to tighten the current accou...
The nineteenth century radically transformed education from a church function to a state duty. Durin...
Australia has been touted as a model for how the United States might benefit by undertaking public f...
A longitudinal data set is used to explore questions about the choice of type of school-public, Cat...
Like many of the English-speaking market democracies, Australia and, perhaps to a lesser extent the ...
It is now taken for granted that everyone should have access to education so that educational succes...
Private schools in Australia receive significant public funding, but their determination to concentr...
The spurious mystique surrounding private schooling should be removed, argues David Burchell NO PRIZ...
In the public policy discourse about vouchers, many Catholic school advocates have been aligned with...
The period from the late 1970s to the late 1980s were transition years for most public (government) ...