2) Increase wages for public school teachers, without using education funding and without giving private/catholic school teachers a pay rise!
Both my parents are public school teachers (one primary, one high school). While this may make all of what I have said slightly biased in some peoples opinions, I know what occurs in the public system (being enrolled in it since kindergarten) and with parents as teachers.
I remember my mum saying that in her 25 years of teaching, not once when teachers have requested a pay rise have they got it without industrial action (strikes).
Public school teachers in general earn about $50 000 a year (that's what my parents are on at the moment). This is in many cases well above average for the nation, however teaching is a profession. All other "professions" such as doctors, actuaries, and others are well on a salary of over $100 000 a year (and this doesn't include bonuses or overtime which teachers do not get)
Sure the initial working hours are seen by many as just 9-3, but this in most cases is not true. My dad has on many occasions done a 10 hour day in teaching (only being paid for 6 hours). People don't take into account that teachers are often at school by 8am and often don't leave till 4 or 5pm. They then go home to work more hours on marking work, planing the next day's schedule and/or doing reports. Then there is extra work with extra activities such as school excursions, school plays/musicals and other extra curricula activites which teachers do not get paid for doing or get overtime for.
The recent industrial action in which public school teachers took two days of action (meaning two days of pay lost) and asking for a 25% wage increase, only getting 12% over two years was also appaling from the government. But what was worse was that catholic teachers took one day strike and received a greater wage increase than that of the public teachers.
I suppose the politicians of Australia want to put the money into the schools that their children are going to (i.e. private schools). It would be rare to find a politician who sent their children to a public school.
The high school I have been going to (Moruya High School) in a small town (Moruya) about 4 hours south of Sydney has around 700 students from year 7-12. The population of Moruya and surrounding areas is about 7000. Our school has no pool, no gym, no tennis courts, has very limited sporting equipment, our english books are over 10 years old most falling apart, our computers are pentium 4s but have no advanced graphics, imaging or video programs available, our buildings look like something from a jail with bare concrete showing, and our whole schools floods when it rains heavily (water leaks into classrooms etc.)
Our school fees for the year are around $150! This is very cheap for a fairly good education, however this is a "voluntary contribution", so most people don't pay it, which adds another burden to the school's funding and budgets.
The other local private school, one catholic, one anglican range in fees from $6000 a year to $15000 a year. However the results in the HSC compared between students from all schools, shows that our school (the only public high school in the area) has the highest results of all.
My dad used to work in the maths department at our school and said that the annual budget for the maths department was $400. They had to replace decaying maths text books with a budget of $400!!!
The local primary school has the majority of their classrooms in demountables!
Despite all these set-backs in resources, our high school had around 6 students last year score over 95 in their uai.
The teachers at our school are mostly over 45 and about to retire, many have taken stress leave sometime with the past decade. New teachers are not being attracted to a stressful, decaying industry with poor pay, and little future oppurtunity for pay rises and other benefits.