Ballarat on track for Melbourne link

Ballarat will get a direct rail line to Melbourne as part of the Regional Rail Link being funded through the Victorian budget, which was announced yesterday.

A total of $4.3 billion has been allocated to the Regional Rail Link, which is the single biggest project in the state budget.

The project will create stand-alone tracks to Melbourne from Bendigo, Geelong and Ballarat.

Ballarat council’s chief executive, Anthony Schink, says the investment is needed to help Ballarat cope with population growth.

“The intention of linking the regional centres with Melbourne is clearly a recognition of the growth that we are experiencing,” he said.

Mr Schink says the line will help to make the fast-train service even quicker.

“What we’ve seen is investment in the fast train, investment in improving the infrastructure to get people to and from Melbourne quicker,” he said.

“But the blockage has always been the lack of dedicated lines when the trains hit the metro system.”

The budget also includes $2 million for intersection upgrades on the Ballarat to Buninyong Road at Mt Clear.

Health boost

Coleraine hospital in the state’s south-west has been secured in the budget and a new $25.2 million will be built in the town.

The Western District Health Service will contribute a further $600,000.

The health service’s chief executive, Jim Fletcher, says the hospital will include 10 new acute patient beds, 29 residential beds and a community health clinic.

“The tight-knit community will be over the moon with respect to this announcement,” he said.

“It is a great boost for Coleraine and what it does is ensure that they will have a health presence in their township for 50 years and beyond.”

Two western Victorian primary schools have also had their futures secured in the budget.

The Halls Gap and Woady Yaloak primary schools are two of six that will share in $10.5 million.

Woady Yaloak’s principal, Alan Campbell, says the money will help redevelop the ageing Smythesdale campus.

“In recent years the nature of teaching has changed – we’re much more flexible in the way we use space as part of our teaching methodology now,” he said.

“By adding these modern teaching spaces we’ll be able to provide a much more invigorating learning experience for our kids.”

A new police station at Daylesford has been allocated $2 million.

Highway loses out

But the Colac-Otway Council is shocked the budget contained no funding to upgrade the western section of the Princes Highway.

The G21 group of south-west Victorian councils had asked the Government to upgrade and duplicate the highway from Geelong to the South Australian border.

The budget included funding to upgrade the highway’s Gippsland section.

The Colac-Otway Mayor, Lyn Russell, says she expected the western part would be included.

“We were hoping it would be in this budget and we’ll be asking the question why it isn’t,” she said.

“It’s a very important transport link and we do need it.

“It’s not only for safety but the road has deteriorated over the years and so we’ll need to look at it and we’ll need to know why it wasn’t funded.”

Goulburn Murray schools share in budget spend

Goulburn Murray region schools were the biggest winners in yesterday’s Victorian budget.

The Victorian Government announced $230 million for school buildings and equipment in the budget.

It includes $1.5 million to rebuild the Toolamba Primary School which was badly damaged by fire in February.

There is funding to keep the Tawonga Primary School open and improvements to those at Euroa, Mansfield, Mount Beauty, Myrtleford and Tallygaroopna.

Visitor facilities at the Mount Buffalo chalet will also be improved and an Indigenous dance academy will be established in Mooroopna.

A total of $2 million will be spent planning the future needs of courts including those at Shepparton and Wangaratta.

The Government will also commit $136 million for fire and emergency services.

But Dr Harry Hemley from the Australian Medical Association says there is no mention of funding in the state budget for the Albury-Wodonga Health Service.

He says the Victorian Government is required to contribute its share of money to running the health service.

Dr Hemley says the Government also needs to better plan for growing demand on health services into the future.

“We’re growing at 100,000 people a year, we need to have a plan and how we’re going to address that growth,” he said.

“In the plan you would have things like the Albury-Wodonga cross border arrangement and all of the small hospitals and how they’re going to fit into it.

“That’s what I mean when I say we need a vision for the future – we need a plan for the future.”

Meanwhile, regional police stations have been granted $10 million for improvements, including money to buy land for a new police station in Echuca.

Campaspe Mayor Peter Williams says it has been a long time coming.

“It is very much a run-down facility and it’s undersized and it certainly doesn’t deliver what the police need to deliver – best quality service,” he said.

“It’s exciting that they’ve identified they’re going to purchase land to build the new station and we hope that that will now roll on to a new police station in the next few years.”

The Liberal Member for Benambra, Bill Tilley, says he is disappointed no money has been allocated to expand the Wodonga police station, which is overcrowded.

“We’ve heard the former chief commissioner of police talking about how she’s been working with this Government about the extensions for the Wodonga police station,” he said.

“[But] no certainty and no time line has been given or any money has been committed to Wodonga police station.”

Law falling behind cyber bullying trend

The former chief justice of the Family Court, Alistair Nicholson, says the law has failed to deal with the growing problem of cyber bullying.

The call comes after a landmark prosecution of cyber-bullying offences in the Melbourne Magistrates Court.

A 21-year-old man was yesterday sentenced to community service under Victoria’s stalking laws for sending sent threatening text messages to a 17-year-old boy who days later committed suicide.

The father of the 17-year-old, Ali Halkich, made an emotional plea for tough new laws following the sentencing.

“We set out to prove that our boy was just a beautiful, healthy child and fell in a dark moment that he couldn’t really understand and believed all the threats, if they were real or not,” Mr Halkich said.

“Unfortunately it only took that brief lapse of concentration and he is no longer here with us.”

Mr Nicholson, now the chair of the National Centre Against Bullying, which is convening a conference on bullying in Melbourne, says there needs to be more specific cyber-bullying laws.

“There is a very strong argument that it should be considered a specific offence,” he said.

“You need to have some firm framework in which people can operate and know what they can and can’t do.

“In the state system, you tend to get it in the stalking area and you may also with some of the sexually explicit communications get into breaches of pornography laws.

“[This leads] to children, quite young people, being placed on sexual offences registers when yet it is some stupid piece of adolescent behaviour that has nothing to do with the sort of behaviour that those registers are aimed at.”

Education Minister Julia Gillard has conceded Federal Government responses to school bullying are not working.

Addressing the cyber-bullying conference, Ms Gillard said one in four children were targets of bullying and in 50 per cent of cases the response by schools was ineffective.

She said there were several areas in need of attention.

“These include empowering students about how to become part of the solution to bullying, and also empowering teachers to help them respond to bullying behaviour, how to intervene when they witness bullying rather than just standing by, and how to report it,” Ms Gillard said.

On the rise

Child psychologist Andrew Fuller regularly sees the effects of cyber bullying on young victims at his private practice.

“It really is the same as somebody who has witnessed a really awful kind of event,” he said.

“They are agitated, they are fearful and they are not sure who is on their side and who’s not.”

He says there is a common belief among cyber bullies that they are legally immune.

Professor of child and adolescent health at Edith Cowan University, Donna Cross, has been researching cyber bullying for three years.

She says the number of children who report being cyber bullied has increased from 15 to 25 per cent over that time.

“About 10 per cent of young people tell us that they are cyber bullied,” Professor Cross said.

“But if we ask them have you ever had somebody send you a nasty picture or a nasty message over the internet or your mobile phone, up to 25 per cent of young people indicate that they have had this behaviour.”

Professor Cross says she believes the solution to cyber bullying will come from schools, but she says legislation is also important.

“Our laws are miles behind the behaviours that young people are engaged in so if people are relying on regulations or a regulatory environment to stop this behaviour, I think that it will be very ineffective in the short term,” she said.

Psychologist Michael Carr-Gregg also wants specific cyber-bullying laws, but in the meantime he says that children need to be taught good cyber citizenship.

“Many young people hide behind a keyboard and there is this phenomenon of digital Dutch courage, where kids will say and do things online that they’d never do in real life,” he said.

One of the key messages that will be delivered at the bullying summit is that educators need to better involve children and teenagers when developing policies to deal with the problem.

New school ‘must be built sooner’

The Member for Geraldton, Ian Blayney, says the construction of a new primary school may need to be brought forward to accommodate strong growth in the city’s southern suburbs.

The State Government has set aside $17 million over three years to build the new school at Wandina by 2014.

But Mr Blayney says the nearby Mount Tarcoola Primary school is already at capacity.

“I’ve asked for the Minister [Liz Constable] to go back and have another look at it and look closely at the school figures,” he said.

“My guess is it will be next year’s enrolment figures that will tell us straight away. If it needs to be brought forward, well then I’ll be hammering on her door trying to get her to do that.”

He says it may be necessary to build the new Wandina school sooner to cater for the growth of Geraldton’s southern suburbs.

“I don’t think there’s any way you’d put this school back a year. It’s more a question of whether you’d bring it forward a year,” he said.

Turner calls for confidential BER inquiry submissions

The Member for Orange, Russell Turner, says he will take confidential submissions from local school principals who are disgusted with the New South Wales Government’s education infrastructure program.

A NSW Parliament inquiry has been announced into the alleged mishandling of the Building the Education Revolution (BER) program which Mr Turner says has left dozens of local schools with overpriced, botched buildings.

He says school principals who are worried about speaking out will be able to remain anonymous.

“I know that they have a lot of trouble with that because … they’ll be threatened with the sack and all sorts of things if they come out against the State Government, but we want to know about the fees and charges that have been imposed by the State Government, we want to hear about shoddy workmanship, we want to hear about overpricing, we want to hear about how local builders have missed out preference to builders out of Sydney,” he said.

Mr Turner says he is expecting a barrage of submissions to come from his electorate.

The inquiry has been announced to look into the fees and charges, workmanship and outcomes of the scheme at local schools.

Mr Turner says much of the money handed out by the Federal Government has ended up in state coffers through administration charges.

He says the Mullion Creek Public School’s $250,000 hall is one of the local projects which has sparked concern.

“What should have been a positive building program has turned into an absolute disaster and a disgrace and a blight on the State Government and part of the inquiry will also ascertain how much of the mismanagement, how much of the waste of funds can be attributed back to the bad management of the State Government,” he said.

Submissions close on June 7.

Science curriculum ‘sends students backwards’

Teachers say a draft national science curriculum will be a significant step backwards for year-seven students in New South Wales.

The Science Teachers’ Association says year-seven topics have been chosen so they can be taught without a laboratory or a specialised teacher because high school does not start until year eight in Queensland, Western Australia and South Australia.

The association’s president, Margaret Watts, says the proposed changes will make it much harder to engage young students.

She says science in year seven will be reduced to a largely descriptive course without the opportunities for hands-on experiments.

“There is going to be a delay in children getting to use the equipment that they would begin to use and learn science in the way that they would normally begin to learn science in year seven in NSW, through the inquiry method, through doing investigations, through learning to use a range of science equipment,” she said.

The Greens say the State Government should reject the draft curriculum.

The Government says it is only a draft curriculum, which people have the opportunity to comment on until May 23.

Teachers threaten $6m NAPLAN boycott

Teachers across New South Wales are challenging the Federal Government to prevent a boycott of national tests that could cost the state more than $6 million in protest against the My School website.

The Australian Education Union (AEU) will vote next week on whether its NSW members will boycott the NAPLAN national literacy and numeracy tests over its opposition to the way the results are used on the My School website.

NSW Education Minister Verity Firth says the state will have to spend more than $6 million hiring freelance exam supervisors if every teacher pulls out, but she expects the participation rate in the boycott to be lower.

Ms Firth has threatened to take the union to the Industrial Relations Commission if the ban goes ahead.

“These tests are too important, the information is too important,” she said. “It’s simply not fair that the public should have to foot the bill to obtain information that rightly belongs to the parents, students and teachers.”

The union says the test results are displayed on the My School website in a way that damages disadvantaged schools and could lead to the publication of simplistic league tables.

AEU president Angelo Gavrielatos says the Commonwealth could prevent the ban by negotiating on the website’s content.

“The Deputy Prime Minister has refused to meet with us since January this year,” he said.

A survey conducted by the union late last month found more than 80 per cent of principals did not think the website gave an accurate depiction of their school.

ICPA supports ag college shake-up

The Isolated Children’s Parents’ Association (ICPA) has welcomed the Queensland Government’s overhaul of agricultural training.

The State Government wants to expand the Australian Agricultural College Corporation from five campuses to 14 by selling farmland.

ICPA state president Lorraine McGinnis says it will mean less travel for some students.

“I think anything that brings courses to where people are looking for them – short courses in areas that people are interested in getting not only credentials but skills in – they’re important and if they can be delivered closer to the students and even the adults, well then it’s making good use of both the skills they have to offer the local facilities,” she said.

She says the overhaul means rural students will be able to achieve the education they desire.

“Most of our students now are going to year 12 and then often off to higher education and many of the children when they do go away to boarding school really enjoy being able to take horses and cattle with them,” she said.

“To handle those when they’re at schools that offer those programs currently are very popular, so I think this is an interesting initiative.”

School starts too early for dozy teens

Researchers at the University of South Australia say school hours should be changed to accommodate the sleep needs of teenagers.

A study published in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health today looks at the sleep patterns of young people and its links to health problems such as obesity.

Professor Tim Olds says many teenagers are not getting enough sleep through the school week and would be better off if school started later in the day.

“It certainly seems that it’s not so much the absolute amount of sleep that teenagers are getting but the fact that they have these sort of cyclical sleep deficits,” he said.

“So they are underslept on school days and they accumulate a big sleep deficit through the week, then they get rid of that sleep deficit Friday and Saturday, then the whole thing begins again on Sunday.

“Adolescents who tend to go to bed a bit later don’t get enough sleep in the school days, so by putting back the school starting time to 10:00am or 11:00am that may remedy that.”

Rocks, leaves on Indigenous learning agenda

An Education Queensland (EQ) document suggests the use of rocks and leaves to bring an Aboriginal perspective to maths lessons.

The maths plan, which is available online, also recommends exploring patterns and symbols as well as using timelines that include Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history.

Earlier, a caller to ABC Local Radio in Brisbane claimed a year three teacher on the Gold Coast had been given a directive by her school principal to issue rocks and leaves to an Indigenous student as part of the EQ program.

The family member called to say the teacher was not told how to implement the new procedures and said the teacher was refusing to talk as she feared she would lose her job.

But curriculum authorities say it is up to teachers to decide the best way to educate students.

Australian Curriculum and Assessment Reporting Authority spokesman Robert Randall says they are considering a nationwide integration of Aboriginal studies into English, maths, science and history.

He says at the end of the day, teachers will make the decision about whether to use certain methods.

“That’s some advice from EQ about some approaches to teaching and learning,” he said.

“Ultimately teachers will make judgments about the best teaching strategies they use in the classroom to meet the needs of children.

“How learning is organised within a school, within a classroom is a key professional role for teachers to take.”

EQ teacher Romany Rodgers, who is employed to help implement the document, has echoed Mr Randall’s views.

He says the example of teachers using leaves and rocks to help teach children to count must be used within context and in conjunction with other methods.

He says the document is not meant to be about stereotyping children.

“This sticks and stones example is tokenistic when on its own,” he said.

“I suppose if you were teaching year one… you can count sticks and stones, [it] might help engage them.”

Mr Rodgers says the document has been given to all classes, not just those with Aboriginal children.

“It should be across all classrooms. I certainly taught classes where there’s no Aboriginal children in the class,” he said.

He says there is no one particular way in which Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children learn.

“The curriculum is not dominated by this very small part of the curriculum,” he said.

Mr Randall says the draft curriculum will be released for review at the end of May, with the finalised version released to states and territories some time next year.

Mystery still surrounds sick students

Education Queensland says it is still trying to determine what caused more than 20 students to fall ill at a Cairns college in far north Queensland last week.

The Redlynch State College students were taken to Cairns Base Hospital with skin irritations and breathing difficulties.

Initial air testing has found no evidence of any harmful chemicals that could have caused the children to become sick.

Further testing is being carried out.

Abbott wants review into insulation spending

The Federal Government says there is no need for a judicial inquiry into either its failed home insulation scheme or the school building program.

The Opposition has written to the Prime Minister asking for a judicial inquiry into both programs – worth about $19 billion – to determine if procedures were followed and if the Government achieved value for money.

The $16 billion Building the Education Revolution program was announced early last year as part of the Government’s stimulus package.

The controversial $2.5 billion home insulation scheme was scrapped after it was linked to four deaths, more than 100 house fires and allegations of fraud.

The Opposition says the cost of both programs and the safety failures of the insulation scheme in particular raise serious questions about the Government’s management.

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott says only the powers of a judicial review would get to the bottom of where the Government has spent the money.

“Were proper procedures followed… and most importantly, was value for money obtained?” he said.

“It’s very important that Australia avoids a recession, but even a cause as important as avoiding a recession does not justify a waste of taxpayers’ money.”

But the Prime Minister’s office says there are already independent Auditor-General inquiries into both programs and they should be allowed to proceed without interruption by yet another inquiry.

Cairns students fall ill from fumes

Authorities are investigating an incident in which more than 20 students were overcome by fumes at a Cairns school laboratory in far north Queensland.

The year seven students were taking part in a lesson in their science classroom at Redlynch College when they began suffering from breathing difficulties and skin irritations.

21 children were taken to Cairns Base Hospital.

Education Queensland spokesman Colin Allen-Waters says the students were not conducting any experiments.

“No chemicals were being used in the classroom so we’re not sure what was the cause,” he said.

The area was cordoned off while Queensland Fire and Rescue Service (QFRS) conducted air tests.

Superintendent Darren Walsh says police will also investigate the incident.

Families’ welfare suspended over school truancy

The Federal Government says a small number of Northern Territory parents had their welfare payments suspended last year because their child was not attending school.

It is the first time Centrelink has taken such action under a trial taking place in some Northern Territory and Queensland communities.

The Government says Centrelink is working with about 30 families to encourage them to send their children to school.

Federal Minister for Indigenous Affairs Jenny Macklin said privacy concerns prevented her from saying how many Territory parents had payments suspended.

“In the Northern Territory, we have had a small number of parents have their welfare payments suspended at the end of last year – a small number of parents have been referred to Centrelink again this year,” she said.

“We have around 20 parents in Brisbane who have also been referred to Centrelink, but there have been no suspensions of payments in Queensland.”

Special school holds out for budget funds

A Wimmera special development school is hoping the $6 million it needs for redevelopment will be in the May state budget.

The school is overcrowded and has structural problems, including leaking roofs.

Its condition was highlighted two years ago.

The senior and junior sites plan to move to one site in High Street North and new facilities are planned, including a large multipurpose room and sensory garden.

The president of the Horsham Special School Council, Max Cuddihy, says the Department of Education endorsed the design for the new school buildings last month.

“They really think this design that we’ve got is going to be a real model for special education,” he said.

“It’s a really exciting design. It was great to see people like that actually enthusiastic.”

‘Positive response’ to campus merger push

The New South Wales Teachers Federation says there has been an overwhelming response to a petition calling for Dubbo College to be restructured so that students from years seven to 12 are on the same campus.

Currently the college has a model where junior and senior students are separated.

The union says it is leading to problems with attendance and student engagement.

The federation’s western region organiser, Brett Bertalli, says it is clear what the community wants to happen with the college.

“It’s been a very positive community response – community members are very interested in the campaign and very interested in seeing a restructure of the Dubbo College,” he said.

“On average we are getting 100 signatures per hour.”

Mr Bertalli says teachers believe restructuring the college will have a positive impact on students.

“When surveyed, 90 per cent of all teachers, the professional educators within the classroom, have said a return to [year] seven to 12 comprehensive high schools will improve the attendance, achievement and that student engagement will improve,” he said.

Gillard stares down teachers over My School

Education Minister Julia Gillard has defended the Federal Government’s My School website after a survey of Australian principals revealed the majority were against it in its current form.

The site allows parents to access information about their child’s school, including overall performance on national numeracy and literacy tests (NAPLAN).

The Australian Education Union (AEU) is opposed to the site in its current form, saying it facilitates the creation of league tables and fails to give an accurate indication of a school’s performance.

AEU national president Angelo Gavrielatos says the survey responses suggest the current use of NAPLAN results on the site is damaging school’s reputations and hurting the community.

“We support the provision of quality, meaningful, valid and accurate information to parents, but it’s got to be provided in a way that supports school improvement,” he said.

“What the Government has created is a regime which will damage schools, rather than lend itself in any way to school improvement.”

But citing the site’s popularity among parents, Ms Gillard was unmoved by the principals’ claims.

“Yesterday the Australian Education Union released a survey it has conducted of what it says are attitudes to the My School website,” she said.

“The Government has made its view very clear. We believe the My School website is necessary to give parents more information than they have ever had before about their child’s school.

“We believe parents around the country have voted with their fingertips in huge numbers because they were hungry for this information.”

Schools ‘ridiculed’

Ms Gillard dismissed claims the use of NAPLAN results meant the site was unrepresentative, saying the Government had consulted heavily in the creation of the site.

But Rob McCurdy, one of more than 1,600 principals who contributed to the survey, said his school had been unfairly branded as one of the worst in the state by a newspaper using information obtained on the My School site.

“I felt in essence that the mat had been ripped from underneath me by a misinterpretation of data that we weren’t given the opportunity to have input into,” he said.

“Five children sat the test; one of those children had an intellectual disability but we allowed [her to take part] … so that she wouldn’t feel left out when the other kids did the test.

“And three out of the five who sat the test had actually been at the school for less than three months. So therefore for my school to be almost ridiculed by the tables as interpreted by the Herald Sun is grossly unfair.”

Ms Gillard refused to be drawn on the claim, maintaining the Government did not support league tables.

“My School doesn’t rank schools, My School is not a league table,” she said.

“We promised that we would not deliver a league table and we have not.

“We’ve drawn on the best of expert advice through our Australian Curriculum Assessment Reporting Authority to design My School, including making sure that if there are very, very small groups of students taking a test at a particular year level, then for very small groups that result is not reported on My School.”

Ms Gillard said highlighting under-performing schools allowed the Government to better target funding.

Boycott threat

Mr Gavrielatos said if the Government refused to negotiate over changes on the site the AEU would be forced to boycott the tests.

“If the Government does not take action to protect students from the damaging effects of league tables and the misuse of data, we can not sit by and see students and school communities damaged as a result of bad policy,” he said.

The Education Minister showed no signs of giving in to the AEU’s threat to boycott upcoming NAPLAN tests.

“I’d call on the Australian Education Union to reconsider its plans to boycott this year’s national tests in response to My School,” she said.

“National testing is important; it’s important for parents and children.

“Because every child has their own report card out of national testing, it’s important for teachers as a diagnostic tool to work out how to best teach the children in their class, and it is important for the My School website so the nation can have accurate information about what’s happening in Australia’s schools.”

Despite dismissing the union’s demands, Ms Gillard said the Government was committed to improving the site and would implement a number of changes to give parents more information about schools.

Letter campaign fights for Dalwood centre

Opposition education spokesman Adrian Piccoli says the community is backing a letter-writing campaign to save the Dalwood Assessment Centre and Palm Avenue School in Sydney.

Temporary arrangements are in place until the end of term two for children with severe learning disorders who have previously been helped by the Dalwood Centre.

Mr Piccoli says he hopes the sheer volume of letters being sent to Education Minister Verity Firth will leave her with no doubt about the value of both facilities in improving learning outcomes for rural students.

He says a Dalwood Stakeholder Group has been established to discuss the ongoing process relating to the closure of the school, but there is no current parent representative appointed to the group.

The Parents Council’s Country vice-president, Dorothy Creek, says an assurance has been secured from the State Government that services will continue beyond the end of the next school term.

Ms Creek says an outreach program to the children in regional centres is a possibility.

“We think that it will be more likely that they will do outreach to rural centres perhaps like Wagga, Dubbo and Orange. Even then they really need to come up with a plan for people are needing it,” she said.

Cyclone doesn’t disturb school asbestos

Education Queensland (EQ) says no asbestos has been disturbed at schools near Mackay, in the state’s north, by Cyclone Ului.

EQ central Queensland regional director Wayne Butler says buildings at Mackay North and Mirani state high schools were damaged by trees but the buildings did not contain asbestos.

There were evacuations at both schools earlier this month after ceiling particles that may have contained asbestos fell into classrooms.

Mr Butler says the schools have been tested and are safe.

“In relation to Mirani State High School, a tree did fall against a building and knocked the eaves to the ground and those eaves have also been tested and there is no asbestos in those eaves.” he said.

Hundreds of teachers investigated for bad behaviour

More than 300 Queensland teachers are being investigated for inappropriate conduct or incompetence.

The investigations are being conducted by a range of authorities including the Queensland College of Teachers (QCT), police and employees.

QCT director John Ryan says the complaints are taken seriously.

“In the great majority of cases, well over 80 per cent, there is no further action, because the allegations are not substantiated,” he said.

“When the allegations are substantiated, we then look at what proceedings we need to conduct to finalise the matter.”

Queensland Teachers Union (QTU) president Steve Ryan says the figures need to be put in perspective.

“One of the points to make is even if you consider 300 cases – that’s a percentage of the number of resident teachers in Queensland, less than half-a-per cent,” he said.

“Certainly when you look at a community of 90,000 teachers, that’s a fair-sized city if you put them together.

“If you had an offence rate of less than half-a-per cent, that would be considered a very good statistic.”

The Opposition has raised the issue in State Parliament but Education Minister Geoff Wilson says the system is working to identify those who do the wrong thing.

“Overwhelmingly teachers throughout Queensland – the 58,000 of them working across schools about 2,000 schools across the three sectors – are highly regarded because it’s a highly respected profession and they are doing the right thing,” he said.