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Where do Brisbane's richest families send their kids? Search your school here

Where do Brisbane's richest families send their kids? Search your school here

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ISQ's report – drawing on answers from more than 3300 parents at independent schools across the state – showed a quarter chose a school before their child was born.
Three-quarters also said the schools' appearance influenced their decision, either 'wholly or to a significant degree'.
'These insights show that parents are deeply engaged in the school selection process,' Mountford said.
'They're looking for schools that reflect their values and offer the best possible environment for their child to thrive.'
St Margaret's Anglican Girls School principal Ros Curtis AM said the inner-city school – whose families draw in a median household income of $293,000 – stood out for its single-sex learning environment, which included many boarders.
She said 20 per cent of the student body boarded, which meant many came from outside Brisbane or overseas.
Families at St Margaret's Anglican Girls School had a median household income of $293,000. Credit: St Margaret's Anglican Girls School
'This provides a wonderful richness to our suburban school and a strong community,' Curtis said.
'When prospective families visit the campus, they can tangibly feel that warm sense of community as they meet students, staff and parents, and they comment on it.'
Curtis said the school also regularly ran fundraising events for charity, as well as school infrastructure and scholarship funds, for students from various backgrounds.
'The school community understands that school fees do not cover all costs associated with a school – particularly when looking towards major development projects,' she said.
'The goal for the school fundraising is always about participation – those who can give more do, but all amounts large and small are gratefully accepted.'
More than four in five parents surveyed by the ISQ said fees were covered by the family's income, while 6 per cent relied partially or wholly on scholarships and bursaries.
The research also found that one in five students at independent schools came from families in the lowest two income brackets – with a dual income of less than $104,000 a year.
While sending a year 12 student to Gregory Terrace will cost a family $24,202 in 2025, the remaining five schools with the highest-earning parents will put families out by at least $30,000 for a child's final year of school.
St Joseph's College Gregory Terrace is a short walk from Brisbane Girls Grammar and Brisbane Grammar School. Credit: Brisbane Times
Catholic schools made up 10 of Brisbane's 20 private schools with the highest-earning parents. Some, but not all, are run by Brisbane Catholic Education, which is controlled by the Brisbane Archdiocese.
BCE said its schools were deeply connected with local communities, and provided quality teaching and learning outcomes for students of all backgrounds.
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'[BCE's] are a mixture of primary, secondary and prep to year 12 schools in metropolitan, regional and rural locations,' it said.
But education economist and policy consultant Adam Rorris said current funding models had left parents with less choice when it came to schooling options, as public schools struggled to secure funds.
'By governments' own metrics, public schools are significantly underfunded,' Rorris said.
'Those same governments – state and federal – have sufficient money to overfund private schools that oftentimes are catering to far wealthier families, and children that have – relative to many public schools families – better resources.'
Rorris said the amount of funding that private schools received – dictated by the federal government's schooling resource standard – varied between schools, but often equated to millions for private schools across their full student body.
He said the current state and federal funding models had created 'unfair funding systems as a legacy for schools'.
'When we talk about the schooling resource standard, that was not about turning out violinists and turning out physicists,' Rorris said.
'That was the cost, on average, that would be required for schools to produce students who were functionally numerate and functionally literate and ought to be on the path to that at grade 3, grade 5, grade 7, and grade 9 – that's what it was based on.'
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Catholic school teachers chase 37 per cent pay rise
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Hundreds of Victorian Catholic school principals are in open revolt against church education authorities over their approach to pay talks with the sector's 30,000 teachers. The pay row between teachers at the state's 493 Catholic schools and their employers is set to intensify in the coming weeks when the main workplace union, the Independent Education Union (IEU), lodges a pay claim worth 37 per cent over three years. The teachers, who say they are paid up to 13 per cent less than their interstate counterparts, also want a $5000 sign-on bonus for each educator, regular retention bonuses worth 5 per cent of their wage and a 17 per cent superannuation contribution. The present workplace deals expire in December, but the two sides cannot even agree on the basis for negotiations, with the employers' umbrella group, the Victorian Catholic Education Authority (VCEA), insisting that the 34 separate church-linked entities that run schools in the state bargain separately with their individual workforces. The teachers want a single sector-wide bargaining process, which would grant them the right to strike, but the authority says the union's pursuit of 'single-interest bargaining' is preventing wage talks from getting under way. If no resolution can be reached, the union says it will ask the Fair Work Commission to impose a sector-wide bargaining model on the employers, a move that would set the scene for school strikes in 2026 if a wage deal is not struck. A group of union members representing 200 principals took aim at the authority this week, accusing it of intransigence, stubbornness and a disrespect for the teaching workforce. In a statement, the union's principals council said the authority's position, which it maintained during past bargaining rounds, denied Catholic teachers their basic industrial and democratic rights.

Where do Brisbane's richest families send their kids? Search your school here
Where do Brisbane's richest families send their kids? Search your school here

The Age

time5 days ago

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Where do Brisbane's richest families send their kids? Search your school here

Loading ISQ's report – drawing on answers from more than 3300 parents at independent schools across the state – showed a quarter chose a school before their child was born. Three-quarters also said the schools' appearance influenced their decision, either 'wholly or to a significant degree'. 'These insights show that parents are deeply engaged in the school selection process,' Mountford said. 'They're looking for schools that reflect their values and offer the best possible environment for their child to thrive.' St Margaret's Anglican Girls School principal Ros Curtis AM said the inner-city school – whose families draw in a median household income of $293,000 – stood out for its single-sex learning environment, which included many boarders. She said 20 per cent of the student body boarded, which meant many came from outside Brisbane or overseas. Families at St Margaret's Anglican Girls School had a median household income of $293,000. Credit: St Margaret's Anglican Girls School 'This provides a wonderful richness to our suburban school and a strong community,' Curtis said. 'When prospective families visit the campus, they can tangibly feel that warm sense of community as they meet students, staff and parents, and they comment on it.' Curtis said the school also regularly ran fundraising events for charity, as well as school infrastructure and scholarship funds, for students from various backgrounds. 'The school community understands that school fees do not cover all costs associated with a school – particularly when looking towards major development projects,' she said. 'The goal for the school fundraising is always about participation – those who can give more do, but all amounts large and small are gratefully accepted.' More than four in five parents surveyed by the ISQ said fees were covered by the family's income, while 6 per cent relied partially or wholly on scholarships and bursaries. The research also found that one in five students at independent schools came from families in the lowest two income brackets – with a dual income of less than $104,000 a year. While sending a year 12 student to Gregory Terrace will cost a family $24,202 in 2025, the remaining five schools with the highest-earning parents will put families out by at least $30,000 for a child's final year of school. St Joseph's College Gregory Terrace is a short walk from Brisbane Girls Grammar and Brisbane Grammar School. Credit: Brisbane Times Catholic schools made up 10 of Brisbane's 20 private schools with the highest-earning parents. Some, but not all, are run by Brisbane Catholic Education, which is controlled by the Brisbane Archdiocese. BCE said its schools were deeply connected with local communities, and provided quality teaching and learning outcomes for students of all backgrounds. Loading '[BCE's] are a mixture of primary, secondary and prep to year 12 schools in metropolitan, regional and rural locations,' it said. But education economist and policy consultant Adam Rorris said current funding models had left parents with less choice when it came to schooling options, as public schools struggled to secure funds. 'By governments' own metrics, public schools are significantly underfunded,' Rorris said. 'Those same governments – state and federal – have sufficient money to overfund private schools that oftentimes are catering to far wealthier families, and children that have – relative to many public schools families – better resources.' Rorris said the amount of funding that private schools received – dictated by the federal government's schooling resource standard – varied between schools, but often equated to millions for private schools across their full student body. He said the current state and federal funding models had created 'unfair funding systems as a legacy for schools'. 'When we talk about the schooling resource standard, that was not about turning out violinists and turning out physicists,' Rorris said. 'That was the cost, on average, that would be required for schools to produce students who were functionally numerate and functionally literate and ought to be on the path to that at grade 3, grade 5, grade 7, and grade 9 – that's what it was based on.' Start the day with a summary of the day's most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter.

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