“Studies estimate that typically about 20 per cent of students will need additional learning support,on top of universal classroom instruction,to develop foundational literacy and numeracy skills,” Grattan’s report said.
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Rolling out tutoring in all government,Catholic and independent primary and secondary schools would cost about $1 billion a year,but the report said the sessions would pay for themselves.
“If one in five students received high-quality small-group tuition in 2023,they would collectively earn an extra $6 billion over their lifetimes,” it said.
“The change we are calling for is to integrate small-group tutoring in schools over the longer term. It’s not a Band-Aid solution but part of a more systematic approach that focuses on prevention,so any problems are identified early.”
The strong link between socioeconomic status and educational achievement in Australia is highlighted in the world’s largest test of 15-year-olds,called PISA. The latest PISA test showed two in five Australian students do not meet national proficiency standards in reading and maths.
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Australian disadvantaged students were behind those in Canada,Britain and South Korea,and on par with those in the US,the PISA test found.
The tutoring push has won the support of Professor Geoff Masters,chief executive of the Australian Council for Educational Research.
“The world’s top-performing school systems do not expect teachers alone to address the diversity of students’ needs. Instead,they have system-wide strategies for better targeting teaching on individuals and their progress,” he said.
“Systematic small-group tutoring is one such strategy that no doubt contributes to world-class performance in Estonia,Finland and a number of East Asian countries.”
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Federal Education Minister Jason Clare said:“Small-group tutoring is already used by some states and this report contains ideas about the sort of reforms the panel[for the next National School Reform Agreement] could look at to boost student outcomes – particularly for those from disadvantaged backgrounds.”
Victoria has spent $738 million on tutoring programs since 2021 to help students catch up after the state’s lengthy COVID-19 lockdowns. Close to 100,000 students – about one in 10 – were tutored at government,Catholic and low-fee independent schools last year.
A Victorian government spokesman said future funding for the program will be considered during the next state budget process.
Rachelle Cole,a teacher and literacy expert at Elevation Secondary College in the northern Melbourne suburb of Craigieburn,said students were arriving to secondary school without foundational skills.
She said the school’s literacy and numeracy tutoring sessions had shown early signs of success,including increased student confidence and engagement in class.
Teacher Rachelle Cole says the tutoring program at Elevation Secondary College in Craigieburn has been successful.Credit:Scott McNaughton
Cole said she would like to see the program continue beyond this year if data showed it was successful.
“That gap between advantaged and disadvantaged students isn’t going away,so we really need to be doing something about that.”
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