Showing 4 items
matching school discipline policy
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Ringwood and District Historical Society
Document - Handout, Southwood Primary School, Discipline Policy Discussion Paper, 11th Nov, 1987
... Southwood Primary School, Discipline Policy Discussion... Primary School, Discipline Policy Discussion Paper, 11th Nov, 1987 ...Scanned A4 paper -
Greensborough Historical Society
Newsletter, Watsonia High School Newsletter 28th June 1985, 28/06/1985
... school discipline policy.... This copy includes the School Discipline Policy.... Policy. This newsletter outlines the ‘new’ school discipline ...An example of the weekly newsletter sent home to parents. This copy includes the School Discipline Policy.This newsletter outlines the ‘new’ school discipline policy that outlaws corporal punishment in government schools.Photocopied 4 pages. Typed newsletter, stapled in top left corner. Student’s name written in pen on front.watsonia high school, school discipline policy, corporal punishment -
Greensborough Historical Society
Folder of Documents, Whole school approach to discipline: information to teachers, 1990, 19/09/1990
Staff documents relating to discipline and curriculum at Greensborough Secondary College 1990-1992.The documents give an insight into the changes to Victorian education policy and how it affected Greensborough.College.Collection of staff documents. Typed and photocopied.In pen on front cover :"Marg Willimott"greensborough secondary college, discipline, curriculum -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
article, Gary Johns, Aboriginal education : remote schools and the real economy, 2006
Aboriginal children in remote communities have the lowest rates of success in school. The reasons for the lack of success are well known, and mainly lie outside of the schools and their programs. Education authorities have made some poor choices in the past. They have not enforced the necessary discipline on children to attend school, and they have placed cultural sensitivity above the needs of the child to cope in the modern economy. More recently they have begun to concentrate on programs in literacy and numeracy, but success is limited because of the perverse incentives of other government initiatives. These initiatives have been blind to the need to deal with the absence of an economy in remote areas, and the absence of a work ethic among Aborigines who are welfare dependent. The absence of the work ethic and the absence of work have severely constrained the returns on the investment in Aboriginal education. The correct policy response to failure at school will be determined not simply by additional programs at school, but by how various issues of transition to the real economy - work, individual obligation, mobility - are managed. The transition will be better managed if educators and governments understand that education is essentially an instrument in economic integration, and that many remote communities are not viable, and where they are not schools should not be used as pawns to keep them afloat. Moreover, educators and governments should understand that western education cannot and should not preserve Aboriginal culture. Most importantly, parents' behaviour needs to change and where incentives to send children to school fail, compulsion must be used.school programs, education policy, literacy and numeracy, employment outcomes