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EDUCATION

Keys to closing the education gap

  • 16 August 2019
When discussing Aboriginal affairs and how to close the gap, there are many disagreements, but there seems to be strong agreement that education is crucial. Aboriginal leader, and former Minister of the Crown in the Northern Territory, Bess Nungarrayi Price, has stated: 'Education belongs to all of us ... We can use education to take responsibility for our problems and find our own solutions.'

While many Aboriginal people have benefited from a good education, or are currently receiving one, there is still much work to be done, particularly in remote communities — for it is here that the challenges are greatest. 

I have visited several remote communities, spoken with some very experienced community leaders and educators, and have read some of the excellent research on this topic. Based on this experience, I offer some ideas here on what I think needs to happen to improve educational outcomes for Aboriginal students in remote communities. First, I will offer three ways of reframing the problem. Then I will suggest some practical solutions

In terms of reframing, first, we need a radical change in how we view Aboriginal school attendance. How about we view them as Australian children? They are Australian children and so are entitled to a good education just like any other Australian child. Sadly, the problem of poor attendance has become 'Aboriginalised' and once that happens, the problem becomes a game of identity politics — and the ones to suffer most are the already disadvantage Aboriginal people.

Second, we need to change the language from improving 'attendance' to improving 'engagement' — to reflect that schools need to be places of learning for Indigenous children, not just minding centres, and that learning comes with engagement. School participation where the children are actively engaged, not only provides immediate benefits to children, but is also a means to a greater end — preparation for life as a fully functioning member of and contributor to society.

Finally, rather than seeing those schools struggling to achieve good attendance as bad or failing, we can use the term Sarra (2014) offers, namely, these schools are 'disconnected' from the communities they serve. Improving school attendance therefore entails building connections between schools and their communities. 

Reframing along those lines is, I believe, foundational to improving educational outcomes in remote communities. The changes of wording offered are not just cosmetic changes — they help gain a more accurate view of the problem, which helps generate