Education is everything.
It can send a kid into space, a child into medicine, teaching, carpentry, trade. It can and does alleviate poverty. It can be the single greatest influence in anyone’s life. The brightest spark in a powder keg that just needs ignition. So if we agree on that, what of public and private or independent schools?
How we educate our kids is the kicker. And it can be a right vicious debate sometimes. Here’s some things you might not know:
1. Private schools didn’t receive ongoing federal funding until the 1970s
Well, what do you know. Funding began first in 1970 to help the struggling Catholic education system but grew from there as choice in education became a greater mantra for families who wanted religious or private education. Also, the Government recognised we kind of needed the independent and private schools to take the load off the system because of…
2. The Goulburn Catholic schools strike in 1962
Oh what a hot mess this was. Here’s the short story: the a local Catholic school in Goulburn had a toilet block that was condemned as unfit for the number of students studying there, but not enough money to fix it. Requests for state aid (Government funding) to help out were repeatedly denied. So all the schools in the diocese shut up shop for a week and 1900 kids attempted to enroll in a strained public system. You can guess how that went!
Top Comments
It irks me how so often public school advocates complain about how they hate private school students looking down on public schools. In most cases it is public school students and parents saying people from private schools are snobs, spoonfed, are not resilient, have no strength of character, have their hand held, self entitled and as a lot of people say rich, dumb kids. I support public and private education but it would be far to simplistic to judge schools solely based on whether they are private or public.
In Sydney I think the preference usually goes like this:
*Public selective
*Private selective
*Private non-selective
*Local public
Unless your child is not particularly academic in which whatever you can afford/suits the family best.