“Instead of an unworkable release of dozens of syllabuses per term this year,I’ve asked the NSW Education Standards Authority to lead with those that are core to improving learning outcomes for students,” said NSW Education Minister Prue Car.
Car said teachers – and student outcomes – were forgotten when the previous timeline was set,placing a heavy burden on them when schools were dealing with crippling staff shortages.
Plans to release 26 draft syllabuses for review this term have been scrapped,while consultation for the new years 11 and 12 history,English and maths syllabuses will be delayed to term 4.
The revamped schedule means all new syllabuses will be delivered to teachers by the end of 2027,bringing it closer in line with the 10-year timeframe outlined in the NSW Curriculum Review led by Geoff Masters in 2019.
New draft syllabuses delayed for consultation
- Aboriginal Studies,years 7 to 10
- Commerce,years 7 to 10
- Technologies syllabuses,years 7 to 10
- Music,years 7 to 10
- History,years 11 and 12
- English,years 11 and 12
- Mathematics,years 11 and 12
Four other mandatory primary school syllabuses and geography,history,PDHPE and visual arts (years 7 to 10) will be delayed for consultation until term 3
The review – the biggest shake-up to the state curriculum in 30 years –aimed to halt an alarming two-decade slump in Australian students’ results in international tests.
Changes to the timeline will not affect the rollout of the new years 3 to 10 English and maths syllabuses,which are available for teachers to plan and prepare this year and will be mandatory in all schools from 2024.