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Teachers still spending own money on resources

Teachers continued to spend an average of up to $900 of their own money on essential school resources in 2020, according to the most recent AEU State of our Schools survey.

The 2020 State of our Schools survey, with more than 12,000 responses from public school principals and teachers, has confirmed that many public school teachers and principals increasingly have to rely on fundraising and spending their own money to meet the shortfall in government funding for public schools.

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According to the survey results:

• 83 per cent of teachers in public schools spent their own money on essential school supplies for their students. • On average, public school teachers each spent $874 of their own money on essential school supplies for students during the year.

• This means that extrapolated across the system, public school teachers collectively spend up to $150 million of their own money each year on classroom resources for their students.

• 74 per cent of public schools engaged in fundraising, with more than 86 per cent of these saying it was important to their school budget.

• While 91 per cent of high-socioeconomic status (SES) schools engage in fundraising, only eight per cent of low-SES schools do so due to limited opportunities to raise funds in a lower socio-economic environment.

• Funds raised are most frequently used to pay for classroom equipment, sporting and play equipment and library resources and textbooks.

AEU Federal President Correna Haythorpe said that the data provided further evidence that current government policy settings had left many public school teachers and principals without the resources they need to do their job.

“Public school teachers have told us that they are personally spending many hundreds of dollars each year to purchase basic school supplies for their students. That is indicative of the resource

Important survey findings

The AEU 2020 State of our Schools survey was conducted in May 2020, with 12,307 respondents from public schools including:

• 9,733 teachers

• 1,787 support staff

• 787 principals

Public school teachers having to pay for classroom resources for their students:

• 83 per cent of teachers spend their own money on supplies at an average of $874 per year.

• Across the system, public school teachers collectively spend up to $150 million of their own money each year on classroom resources for their students.

• This money is spent mainly on resources such as stationery, classroom equipment, books and support for individual students.

• Public primary school teachers spend an average of $1,067 of their own money each year. • Public school teachers in special school settings spend an average of $1,004 of their own money each year.

• Teachers at very remote public schools spend an average of $1,160 of their own money on classroom supplies each year.

• 26 per cent of public school teachers spend over $1,000 of their own money on basic classroom supplies each year, and 12 per cent spend more than $2,000 of their own money on basic classroom supplies each year.

Public schools engaged in fundraising:

• 74 per cent of public school principals say their schools engage in fundraising, including 84 per cent of primary schools.

• 86 per cent of public school principals say fundraising is important or very important to their school budget. • 55 per cent of public schools fundraise for basic classroom equipment and for play and sports equipment (50 per cent).

• 43 per cent of public schools fundraise for basic library resources and textbooks.

• 27 per cent of schools use fundraising to pay for basic maintenance of school infrastructure, and another 21 per cent use it for new buildings and facilities.

• The Federal Coalition has not provided any federal funding for public school capital works since 2017.

According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics there were 206,784 teachers working in public schools in 2019. Multiply this figure by 0.833 (the percentage of teachers who told us they spend their own money), multiplied by $874.10 (the average annual spend) = $150,564,662.

shortages within public schools under current government policy settings,” she said.

“In addition, 86 per cent of school principals tell us fundraising is vitally important to their school budgets and is used for library resources and textbooks, to pay for school maintenance and for buildings and facilities.”

Ms Haythorpe said funding agreements between the Commonwealth and the states and territories meant that 99 per cent of public schools will fall under the Schooling Resource Standard (SRS) by 2023.

“This means that public schools will be underfunded by 10s of billions of dollars relative to the SRS through to 2027,” she said. “This data is indicative of the deep inequality evident in school funding policy in Australia. Schools should not have to raise funds to provide basic resources. This must be funded by governments.”

Ms Haythorpe said that the State of our Schools 2020 survey had reinforced the need for public schools and public school teachers to be given the resources and the funding they need to do their job, and for students to have the resources they need to achieve their potential. “Teachers in primary schools, those working with students who have a disability or in more settings, have said they spend over a thousand dollars each year to provide resources for their students,” she said.

“Teachers should not have to spend thousands of dollars of their own money, nor should they have to run fundraising barbeques and events to make up resource shortages. “The federal government must ensure that all public schools reach the minimum benchmark of 100 per cent of the SRS so that teachers and principals have the resources necessary to provide a highquality education to their students. “It is vital that the Commonwealth invest in capital works funding for public schools, to ensure that all schools have the infrastructure needed to cater for student enrolment growth and to provide high quality learning facilities. “It is a joint responsibility between the Commonwealth and state and territory governments to ensure that public schools have the resources needed to cater for the educational needs of every child.”

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