Steady progress in closing Indigenous education gap

Published Tuesday, 03 July, 2018 at 03:30 PM

Minister for Education and Minister for Industrial Relations
The Honourable Grace Grace

Queensland’s state schools are successfully closing the gap in the classroom, with the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander student retention rate continuing to rise.

Education Minister Grace Grace today heard of the great work teachers and educators were doing to increase student attendance at the two-day Excellence through innovation Indigenous Education Conference.

Minister Grace expressed her gratitude to the 300 state school educators who have come together at the Royal International Convention Centre in Brisbane.

“I’m so proud of our teachers and educators’ commitment to improving the attendance, retention and Year 12 attainment rate of Indigenous students,” Minister Grace said.

“Since 2012, the Year 10-12 apparent retention rate for Indigenous state school students has continued to improve, rising at a faster pace than for non-Indigenous students.

“In 2017, the Year 10-12 apparent retention rate gap fell to 16.1 percentage points, down from a high of 21.4 per cent in 2012.

“This shows that we are making gains towards closing the gap for our Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students.

“In addition, last year 97.2 per cent of Indigenous state school students across Queensland achieved Year 12 certification, compared to 98.1 per cent of non-Indigenous students.

“Also, nearly two thirds (63.8 per cent) of OP eligible Indigenous state school students across Queensland achieved an OP 1-15 in 2017, up one percentage point from 2016.”

Minister Grace said Queensland was home to close to one third of Australia’s Indigenous student population, with 29.9 per cent of the total number of full-time Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander school students enrolled in Queensland schools in 2017.

“It’s only right that Queensland should lead the way in putting strategies into action to ensure these students have every opportunity to achieve success,” she said.

“Improvements are being made, some of them gradual, some of them quite remarkable.

“The Palaszczuk Government is committed to continuing to build on these improvements well into the future.”

The conference attracted highly respected keynote speakers, including University of Melbourne Indigenous Health Equity Unit Director Professor Kerry Arabena, University of Waikato Emeritus Professor for Maori Education Russell Bishop and award-winning Indigenous novelist Alexis Wright.

Media contact: Emma Clarey – 0439 578 472