News report at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1NPcz0h2ScA
On 19
August, the Premier announced the following via a media release.
Safeguarding our democracy
through education
Boosting the education of young
people about the important role civics and citizenship play in our society will
be the focus of sweeping nation-leading curriculum reforms outlined by the
Malinauskas Labor Government today.
Civics will be overhauled in public schools with an $18.4m investment, ensuring every student graduates with the knowledge and skills needed in an increasingly polarized world.
The changes
include:
·
All years 7 and 8 public school students will study civics and
citizenship for an hour per week.
·
Every subject in years 9 and 10 will have civics and citizenship
incorporated into it as part of the introduction of a Cross-Curriculum
Priority.
·
Public schools will be supported to introduce new opportunities for
students to participate in school-based democratic opportunities, such as SRCs.
·
All public school students will be able to participate in an annual
Active Citizenship Convention, starting next year, putting their education into
practice.
These
reforms – designed to strengthen the future of democracy in South Australia –
will see the state lead the nation in this area. We will also be the first
state or territory to introduce a specialised civics teacher in every public
high school and B-12 school.
Increasing
an educational focus on the civics and citizenship was championed by the South
Australian Governor Frances Adamson AC, along with the Premier, and the
advocacy of the Commissioner for Children and Young People Helen Connolly, who
has argued for more civics and citizenship education in South Australia.
Civics is
currently delivered through Humanities and Social Sciences as a compulsory
aspect of learning between the years of 3 and 8. However, the quality of this
delivery is mixed due to a lack of specialist teachers.
There has
been a 15 per cent decline in students studying year 12 Politics, Power and
People between 2021 and 2023 – highlighting the need for urgent reform.
The
introduction of a Cross-Curriculum Priority, which currently exists in the
Australian Curriculum for Sustainability, Asia and Australia’s Engagement with
Asia, and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Histories and Cultures, will
mean that teachers in all subject areas in years 9 and 10 will need to embed
civics into existing content. This will support students to apply the knowledge
they learn in years 7 and 8 to real topics and scenarios across areas including
science, maths, arts and English.
The
Department will also work with schools to increase the offering of politics in
SACE so more students have the opportunity to study it in their senior school
years.
Additionally,
a three-day statewide Active Citizenship Convention will be hosted annually,
starting in 2025, for students to engage in workshops about issues of
importance to them; and to learn about the ways in which relevant laws and
policies are made and how they are influenced.
A working
group, chaired by Department for Education Chief Executive Professor Martin
Westwell, will oversee the implementation of these reforms.
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