TRINITY TODAY 2020 | Trinity College | The University of Melbourne | Issue 89

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BIG IDEAS 09 TRINITY TODAY

EDUCATING THE NATION Australia’s Minister for Education talks about improving university access for rural students, offering free childcare in a pandemic and life on the farm. BY E M ILY McAU L IFFE

WEDDING BELLS Brendan Murphy met his wife Sally Walker – a former student of Janet Clarke Hall who became ViceChancellor of Deakin University – on the Bulpadock and the couple were married in the Trinity College Chapel by Trinity’s fifth Warden, the Revd Dr Evan Burge, in 1979. The couple are shown here with Evan in the background and Brendan’s groomsman and ex-Trinity student Dr Stuart Anderson (TC 1973) on the right.

… and learnt to party. ‘I didn’t work terribly hard in those first few years, but I had a lot of fun.’ After two years living on campus and three years house sharing, Brendan returned to Trinity in his last year of medicine and bunkered down in Upper Bishops’ with plenty of coffee and 3am souvlakis to prepare for his final exams. ‘I didn’t participate as much in college life in that last year; I was almost catching up on those past years of study I should’ve done earlier.’ The crammed study paid off and led Brendan to a fulfilling career, so much so that he makes the enviable claim that he’s never not wanted to go to work. ‘I’ve had the huge privilege of enjoying every job I’ve ever done,’ he says. ‘Even as a junior doctor working 120-plus hours a week, I loved every minute of it. I think it’s helped that I’ve changed careers fairly dramatically on different occasions, but I’ve been incredibly fortunate. Not everyone gets to enjoy what they do every day.’ n

‘I

t was something I was better able to do 30 years ago, but I think my back would get very sore even attempting to do it now,’ says Dan Tehan (TC 1987) of his sheep-shearing skills. The federal Minister for Education had seriously considered becoming a farmer after growing up working on his family’s sheep and cattle farm in regional Victoria. But Dan had also grown up with an insider’s view of politics, with his late mother Marie Tehan serving in the Victorian parliament from 1987 to 1999. ‘If you see politics that upfront and personal you can see the positives, but you do question why anyone would want to go into it,’ he says, admitting that volunteering in his mother’s office didn’t leave him with a burning desire to enter politics. During his time at Trinity College and the University of Melbourne, Dan developed an interest in international relations and foreign policy. He subsequently worked as a diplomat before deciding that a career in parliament was worth pursuing. Dan was elected to federal parliament in 2010 and was sworn in as Australia’s Minister for Education in 2018. He says his insights into different schooling systems has been immensely helpful in this role, having attended a Catholic primary school, public high school and independent boarding school. And the rounding experience of Trinity topped it off. ‘At the higher-education level, especially for students who are coming from regional and rural Australia, college life brings a wide array of

benefits,’ he says. ‘Anything that broadens your horizons, helps you to develop friendships, and gives you experiences that you would never otherwise have had is incredibly beneficial and Trinity does that within the bounds of a tight-knit community.’ However, Dan is aware that a fulfilling education isn’t accessible to all, so is pushing to break down the divide between rural and city kids. ‘Moving away [from a rural or remote area] to attend university comes at a cost, and often that is a strong determinant as to whether people will decide to go down the higher-education path or not,’ he says. ‘If we are to continue to grow and develop as a nation, then it’s absolutely vital that we break down that divide when it comes to accessing education.’ To this end, in 2020, Dan announced a $400 million investment in regional education to improve access to higher education for students living in rural and remote areas, in addition to a controversial university fee overhaul. Dan also made one of Australia’s boldest policy moves by announcing free childcare during the COVID-19 pandemic. ‘They were exciting times, they were challenging times and they were a little bit nerve wracking as well, but ultimately it was something that worked for both parents and the sector itself,’ he says of the decision. ‘Looking back on my career, it will be a period that will be forever with me.’ n


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