logo
Anzac Day in Gallipoli: Agony of war laid out on the gravestones of Australian and New Zealand soldiers

Anzac Day in Gallipoli: Agony of war laid out on the gravestones of Australian and New Zealand soldiers

7NEWS24-04-2025

It's a truism of Gallipoli.
The greater the peace, the serenity, the beauty of a cemetery, the greater the horror, the anguish, the pain of the stories within.
Ari Burnu is the closest cemetery to Anzac Cove where 16,000 young Australians and New Zealanders landed under fire on April 25, 1915.
Initially it was a slaughter.
Many diggers did not even make it out of the boats rowed ashore.
Many more were killed and wounded on the beach.
Stand on that beach now and look up at the hills beyond and you realise immediately they never had a chance.
As you shake your head in disbelief, your imagination wanders.
You feel as though you can hear the deadly clatter of machine guns and the screams of young men.
It sends chills down your spine.
But stroll into Ari Burnu on a sunny, still day and you hear the water lapping gently on the shore.
If you're lucky, you can see dolphins bobbing up and down just 50m from the beach.
And the birds! A cacophony of chirping.
It's gorgeous.
Then a jolt back to reality.
I always make a point of heading to the grave of Frank Rawlings.
He was a 27-year-old draughtsman from Western Australia.
His epitaph jumps out, grabs me around the throat and chokes me up.
Every time I gasp, tears well in my eyes and I have to turn away, my composure gone..
'My Only Darling Son.'
It's so simple, but it captures the agony, the distress of a distraught mother so far away to whom Frank was the little boy she nurtured and the young man she was so proud of.
The love and despair radiates from that stone.
As a parent of two sons myself, I can't even bear to imagine it .
Just think ... multiply that 8,700 times right around a nation just 15 years from independence, still struggling with the tyranny of distance and communication.
That's how many young Aussies were killed at Gallipoli.
Not far from Frank's grave is another I always visit.
George Seagar enlisted in the Navy at just 15, but transferred to the Army when war broke out.
He told authorities he was 19, but he was really just 17 when he was killed in Gallipoli.
On his grave, again the pain of his parents writ large.
'He died a man and closed his life's brief day 'ere it had scarce begun.'
We all know 17-year-old boys.
Our own sons, relatives, our friends' children.
We all know the last place they should be is on a battlefield.
Both Frank and George were members of the legendary Australian Light Horse.
They were highly trained, courageous riders.
Their skills honed in the Australian bush.
At Gallipoli the terrain — steep hills, ridges , thick bush — rendered their riding skills and training redundant.
So tragically they were used as cannon fodder — literally.
Both Frank and George were killed in the bloody, pointless and infamous charges at Turkish trenches on August 7, 1915 so graphically and powerfully depicted at the end of the movie Gallipoli.
Go to where they died now and once again you shake your head in in disbelief.
The area between where the Australian trenches and the Turkish trenches were is not much bigger than a tennis court.
Yet wave after wave of young soldiers were ordered to climb out of their trenches and sprint towards machine guns.
Just imagine the courage, the steely grit and discipline required to do that having seen wave after wave of your mates massacred before your very eyes!
Not far from there is Walker's Ridge cemetery.
High in the hills, it has a beautiful view overlooking the sparkling Aegean Sea, usually dotted with fishing boats, ferries to nearby Greek islands and tourist vessels bobbing in the distance.
Once again, idyllic.
Buried there is Major Tom Redford.
He was, by all accounts, a dignified leader respected and well liked by his men.
He inspired Bill Hunter's character in the film Gallipoli.
In one of the movie's most poignant lines as wave after wave are sent out to die Hunter says, 'I can't ask my men to do what I wouldn't do myself'.
On that same principle, Major Redford led his men out on the first suicidal wave.
He was killed after sprinting to within 10m of the Turkish trench.
According to an eyewitness 'down he went like a log'.
A friend later wrote: 'A braver and more honourable man never donned a uniform.'
Tragically he was one of 154 young Aussies so needlessly killed within minutes.
Bloody heartbreaking.
Last year we visited Tom's grave with his descendant, Leading Seaman Claire Donaghue.
She was to play at the Dawn Service in the Defence Force Band.
She was deeply moved, fighting back tears.
'He will absolutely be in the back of my mind. I am so proud of his courage!'
Once again, I had to turn away...
In 1985, as a 24-year-old reporter in Canberra I had the great honour of interviewing Gallipoli veteran Charles Bingham as he marked the 70th anniversary of the landing at the Australian War Memorial.
Kindly, gentle, passionate, Charles was a stretcher bearer at Gallipoli.
He spoke of the enormous responsibility and obligation he felt because he was the person to whom many diggers uttered their last words.
It really struck a nerve with me.
I couldn't comprehend how someone younger than I was could cope with that — time after time after time.
When he came back home after World War I ended, Charles dedicated his life to visiting families of the fallen and to veterans' welfare.
He insisted their sacrifices should never be forgotten.
After I interviewed him, he told me when there were no more Australian Gallipoli veterans (the last one died in 2001) it would be up to journalists like myself to ensure their stories live on.
'Keep on telling our stories,' he urged.
Now every time I do a story on veterans from any of the wars Australia has been involved in, I think of Frank, George and Tom and their grieving families.
The words of Charles echo in my mind..
And I hope in some small way we are helping to ensure..as that great Australian Banjo Paterson once wrote.
'Their ghosts may be heard.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

No Australians believed dead in Air India plane crash
No Australians believed dead in Air India plane crash

The Advertiser

time21 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

No Australians believed dead in Air India plane crash

No Australian citizens or residents are believed to have been in a plane crash that killed more than 240 people in India's west. The aviation disaster in the city of Ahmedabad was the worst the world has seen in a decade. Foreign Minister Penny Wong said Australia's thoughts were with all those affected by the crash. "I know I speak for all Australians when I say this is heartbreaking," she told reporters on Friday. "I had a message exchange with (External Affairs Minister) Dr Jaishankar, expressing the condolences of Australians to him. "We also think of our good friends in the United Kingdom and in many other countries. It is a devastating and distressing day for these two countries and many others." More than 200 bodies have been recovered from the crash site, but authorities say some of those may be people killed on the ground. The aircraft passengers included 217 adults, 11 children and two infants, a source told Reuters. Of those, 169 were Indian nationals, 53 were Britons, seven Portuguese, and one Canadian, according to Air India's latest advice. Senator Wong said she had not been advised that any Australians were on board but diplomatic staff were closely engaging with Indian authorities. "We've not had any anyone reach out for consular assistance. Obviously, we stand ready to provide support to Australians as required," she said. The Australian High Commission in New Delhi and the Consulate-General in Mumbai were following up with local authorities to determine whether there were any Australians on board, the Department of Foreign Affairs said. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the disaster was devastating. "In this time of tragedy, Australia's thoughts are with everyone affected," he posted on the social media platform X. The Air India plane was heading to London's Gatwick Airport when it crashed just minutes after take-off. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner came down in a residential area, crashing onto a medical college hostel outside the airport during lunch hour. Only one passenger survived the crash, Air India confirmed. Thirty seconds after take-off, there was a loud noise and then the plane crashed," 40-year-old survivor Ramesh Viswashkumar told the Hindustan Times from his hospital bed. "It all happened so quickly. When I got up, there were bodies all around me. "I was scared. I stood up and ran. There were pieces of the plane all around me." with Reuters No Australian citizens or residents are believed to have been in a plane crash that killed more than 240 people in India's west. The aviation disaster in the city of Ahmedabad was the worst the world has seen in a decade. Foreign Minister Penny Wong said Australia's thoughts were with all those affected by the crash. "I know I speak for all Australians when I say this is heartbreaking," she told reporters on Friday. "I had a message exchange with (External Affairs Minister) Dr Jaishankar, expressing the condolences of Australians to him. "We also think of our good friends in the United Kingdom and in many other countries. It is a devastating and distressing day for these two countries and many others." More than 200 bodies have been recovered from the crash site, but authorities say some of those may be people killed on the ground. The aircraft passengers included 217 adults, 11 children and two infants, a source told Reuters. Of those, 169 were Indian nationals, 53 were Britons, seven Portuguese, and one Canadian, according to Air India's latest advice. Senator Wong said she had not been advised that any Australians were on board but diplomatic staff were closely engaging with Indian authorities. "We've not had any anyone reach out for consular assistance. Obviously, we stand ready to provide support to Australians as required," she said. The Australian High Commission in New Delhi and the Consulate-General in Mumbai were following up with local authorities to determine whether there were any Australians on board, the Department of Foreign Affairs said. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the disaster was devastating. "In this time of tragedy, Australia's thoughts are with everyone affected," he posted on the social media platform X. The Air India plane was heading to London's Gatwick Airport when it crashed just minutes after take-off. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner came down in a residential area, crashing onto a medical college hostel outside the airport during lunch hour. Only one passenger survived the crash, Air India confirmed. Thirty seconds after take-off, there was a loud noise and then the plane crashed," 40-year-old survivor Ramesh Viswashkumar told the Hindustan Times from his hospital bed. "It all happened so quickly. When I got up, there were bodies all around me. "I was scared. I stood up and ran. There were pieces of the plane all around me." with Reuters No Australian citizens or residents are believed to have been in a plane crash that killed more than 240 people in India's west. The aviation disaster in the city of Ahmedabad was the worst the world has seen in a decade. Foreign Minister Penny Wong said Australia's thoughts were with all those affected by the crash. "I know I speak for all Australians when I say this is heartbreaking," she told reporters on Friday. "I had a message exchange with (External Affairs Minister) Dr Jaishankar, expressing the condolences of Australians to him. "We also think of our good friends in the United Kingdom and in many other countries. It is a devastating and distressing day for these two countries and many others." More than 200 bodies have been recovered from the crash site, but authorities say some of those may be people killed on the ground. The aircraft passengers included 217 adults, 11 children and two infants, a source told Reuters. Of those, 169 were Indian nationals, 53 were Britons, seven Portuguese, and one Canadian, according to Air India's latest advice. Senator Wong said she had not been advised that any Australians were on board but diplomatic staff were closely engaging with Indian authorities. "We've not had any anyone reach out for consular assistance. Obviously, we stand ready to provide support to Australians as required," she said. The Australian High Commission in New Delhi and the Consulate-General in Mumbai were following up with local authorities to determine whether there were any Australians on board, the Department of Foreign Affairs said. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the disaster was devastating. "In this time of tragedy, Australia's thoughts are with everyone affected," he posted on the social media platform X. The Air India plane was heading to London's Gatwick Airport when it crashed just minutes after take-off. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner came down in a residential area, crashing onto a medical college hostel outside the airport during lunch hour. Only one passenger survived the crash, Air India confirmed. Thirty seconds after take-off, there was a loud noise and then the plane crashed," 40-year-old survivor Ramesh Viswashkumar told the Hindustan Times from his hospital bed. "It all happened so quickly. When I got up, there were bodies all around me. "I was scared. I stood up and ran. There were pieces of the plane all around me." with Reuters No Australian citizens or residents are believed to have been in a plane crash that killed more than 240 people in India's west. The aviation disaster in the city of Ahmedabad was the worst the world has seen in a decade. Foreign Minister Penny Wong said Australia's thoughts were with all those affected by the crash. "I know I speak for all Australians when I say this is heartbreaking," she told reporters on Friday. "I had a message exchange with (External Affairs Minister) Dr Jaishankar, expressing the condolences of Australians to him. "We also think of our good friends in the United Kingdom and in many other countries. It is a devastating and distressing day for these two countries and many others." More than 200 bodies have been recovered from the crash site, but authorities say some of those may be people killed on the ground. The aircraft passengers included 217 adults, 11 children and two infants, a source told Reuters. Of those, 169 were Indian nationals, 53 were Britons, seven Portuguese, and one Canadian, according to Air India's latest advice. Senator Wong said she had not been advised that any Australians were on board but diplomatic staff were closely engaging with Indian authorities. "We've not had any anyone reach out for consular assistance. Obviously, we stand ready to provide support to Australians as required," she said. The Australian High Commission in New Delhi and the Consulate-General in Mumbai were following up with local authorities to determine whether there were any Australians on board, the Department of Foreign Affairs said. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the disaster was devastating. "In this time of tragedy, Australia's thoughts are with everyone affected," he posted on the social media platform X. The Air India plane was heading to London's Gatwick Airport when it crashed just minutes after take-off. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner came down in a residential area, crashing onto a medical college hostel outside the airport during lunch hour. Only one passenger survived the crash, Air India confirmed. Thirty seconds after take-off, there was a loud noise and then the plane crashed," 40-year-old survivor Ramesh Viswashkumar told the Hindustan Times from his hospital bed. "It all happened so quickly. When I got up, there were bodies all around me. "I was scared. I stood up and ran. There were pieces of the plane all around me." with Reuters

Australian airline Captain Byron Bailey details why he believes 'pilot error' the reason behind crash of Air India Flight 171
Australian airline Captain Byron Bailey details why he believes 'pilot error' the reason behind crash of Air India Flight 171

Sky News AU

timea day ago

  • Sky News AU

Australian airline Captain Byron Bailey details why he believes 'pilot error' the reason behind crash of Air India Flight 171

An experienced Australian airline captain has explained why he believes pilot error is to blame for the crash of Air India Flight 171 which has left hundreds of people dead. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner departed Ahmedabad airport, in India's north-west, on Thursday but came down in a densely populated neighbourhood seconds later. Footage showed the 11-year-old aircraft slowly descending about 15 seconds after lifting from the runway before it hit a medical college hostel and exploded into flames. Speaking to Sky News Australia, former commercial pilot Captain Byron Bailey said pilot error was "highly likely" the cause of the crash after he watched the video. He pointed to a "remarkable" part of the clip which showed the landing gear was still down, despite the plane reaching 190 metres in the air, according to Flightradar24. Captain Bailey said pilots are in constant communication during the takeoff process and when the required speed is reached for takeoff, they pull back on the yoke. "And the pilot flying will say 'gear up' and that's it for that moment. That occurs at a couple of hundred feet. So why, it's 600 feet, the undercarriage is still down means they haven't selected the gear," he told Sky News. "The other thing that's remarkable is it appears the flap, which is the high lift devices that enables you to fly slower, they appear not to be down. "Now, you can't take off without flap." Captain Bailey suggested it was around this time a fatal error was made. "But my own suspicion is that when the pilot flying called for gear up, the other pilot inadvertently grabbed the flap lever and pushed it through to zero," he said. "And once you've done that, immediately you're in a deep stall and at 600 feet you cannot recover. There's not enough height even though the engines are at full power." The Dreamliner had been labelled as the safest plane up until the crash of Air India. The 787-8 had not been in a fatal incident since its introduction. It is one of the most advanced jets and was brought into service in 2011, with Boeing selling more than 2,500 of the model to airlines, including 47 to Air India. Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg has offered his deepest condolences to the families of the victims and has spoken to Air India's chairman to offer his "full support". He was due to attend an air show in Paris, but cancelled his appearance. The company was last year plagued with a series of incidents around the world involving its aircraft. Boeing shares fell about 4.2 per cent after the crash. India's Aircraft Accident Bureau Investigation has started a formal investigation. The National Transport Safety Board said a team of US investigators will be flown over to India to support local authorities to find the exact cause which led to the fatal incident. British Air Accidents Investigation Branch has also offered its assistance. Air India on Friday confirmed 241 of the 242 passengers and crew were killed. It said there were 230 passengers and 12 crew on board, including 169 Indian nationals, 53 British nationals, one Canadian, and seven Portuguese nationals. The sole survivor has been named as Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, 40, a British-Indian national who was assigned seat 11A, according to officials and media on the ground. Police have taped off the scene at the site of the crash. Medical technicians transported blue boxes, which contained human remains, to be forensically tested to confirm their identity as most bodies were badly burnt.

'I didn't see the point': why more Aussie students are leaving school early
'I didn't see the point': why more Aussie students are leaving school early

The Advertiser

timea day ago

  • The Advertiser

'I didn't see the point': why more Aussie students are leaving school early

Riley Valentine has never regretted leaving school early. She now works full time in a childcare centre looking after and educating three- and four-year-olds, something she knew from early high school was her career path. Ms Valentine, 21, left school at the end of year 11 and got her qualifications at TAFE in Sydney. "Me sitting through things that don't interest me at all - I didn't see the point to follow through if I knew what I wanted to do," she said. "It was easier access [than university] in the way that I could get in and do it earlier." Ms Valentine is not alone. More than 20 per cent of all Australian students drop out before the end of year 12 - and the rate is higher at government schools where one in four don't finish. The proportion of children completing high school has been steadily declining in Australia over the past 10 years, with some variation, according to the latest Productivity Commission Report on Government Services. In 2017, the retention rate for full time students in years 10 to 12 was 83.3 per cent. By 2024, that had dropped to 79.9 per cent. The same year the retention rate at public schools was 74.3 per cent, down from 79.8 per cent seven years earlier, although a slight increase since 2023. The head of research and advocacy at The Smith Family, Anne Hampshire, said there were two groups of early leavers and the first had positive post-school experiences, with a clear career pathway through apprenticeships and other vocational training. The second group was more cause for concern. "What's happening to them is they're being pushed out of school, in inverted commas, for a range of reasons. "And that could be they've had poor literacy and numeracy, they're not doing very well academically; they start to fall behind, they can't catch up," she said. They could even be bullied, have mental health problems, complex home lives - or a combination of these. "Some of them, they can't see the purpose in completing year 12," Ms Hampshire said. "And so, for them, they end up drifting out of school by these much more negative factors." Ms Hampshire said there was a strong link between finishing year 12 and positive work and study outcomes post-school. "Their engagement in post-school employment, education, training is much more precarious and uncertain, which is not good for them individually, but it's also not good for us as a nation," she said. Having ready access to dedicated careers advice in school was increasingly important as the skills needed for jobs became more sophisticated in a rapidly-changing, knowledge-based economy. "Many young people across the country aren't getting that high quality career support," Ms Hampshire said. "They might have one careers advisor for a large school of 1200 students." Efforts to lift literacy and numeracy levels at a primary school level were also crucial after the latest NAPLAN results showed about one in three students fell short of basic standards. And Ms Hampshire said children from poorer backgrounds and regional areas needed additional assistance to stay in school. But for Riley Valentine, there are no regrets - and even her parents eventually warmed to the idea of her quitting school in favour of TAFE. "At the start, because I mentioned it very early, they weren't on board with it," Ms Valentine said. "But later down the track, I think they realised how much I actually didn't belong in school, or they realised how much I wanted to do other things." Riley Valentine has never regretted leaving school early. She now works full time in a childcare centre looking after and educating three- and four-year-olds, something she knew from early high school was her career path. Ms Valentine, 21, left school at the end of year 11 and got her qualifications at TAFE in Sydney. "Me sitting through things that don't interest me at all - I didn't see the point to follow through if I knew what I wanted to do," she said. "It was easier access [than university] in the way that I could get in and do it earlier." Ms Valentine is not alone. More than 20 per cent of all Australian students drop out before the end of year 12 - and the rate is higher at government schools where one in four don't finish. The proportion of children completing high school has been steadily declining in Australia over the past 10 years, with some variation, according to the latest Productivity Commission Report on Government Services. In 2017, the retention rate for full time students in years 10 to 12 was 83.3 per cent. By 2024, that had dropped to 79.9 per cent. The same year the retention rate at public schools was 74.3 per cent, down from 79.8 per cent seven years earlier, although a slight increase since 2023. The head of research and advocacy at The Smith Family, Anne Hampshire, said there were two groups of early leavers and the first had positive post-school experiences, with a clear career pathway through apprenticeships and other vocational training. The second group was more cause for concern. "What's happening to them is they're being pushed out of school, in inverted commas, for a range of reasons. "And that could be they've had poor literacy and numeracy, they're not doing very well academically; they start to fall behind, they can't catch up," she said. They could even be bullied, have mental health problems, complex home lives - or a combination of these. "Some of them, they can't see the purpose in completing year 12," Ms Hampshire said. "And so, for them, they end up drifting out of school by these much more negative factors." Ms Hampshire said there was a strong link between finishing year 12 and positive work and study outcomes post-school. "Their engagement in post-school employment, education, training is much more precarious and uncertain, which is not good for them individually, but it's also not good for us as a nation," she said. Having ready access to dedicated careers advice in school was increasingly important as the skills needed for jobs became more sophisticated in a rapidly-changing, knowledge-based economy. "Many young people across the country aren't getting that high quality career support," Ms Hampshire said. "They might have one careers advisor for a large school of 1200 students." Efforts to lift literacy and numeracy levels at a primary school level were also crucial after the latest NAPLAN results showed about one in three students fell short of basic standards. And Ms Hampshire said children from poorer backgrounds and regional areas needed additional assistance to stay in school. But for Riley Valentine, there are no regrets - and even her parents eventually warmed to the idea of her quitting school in favour of TAFE. "At the start, because I mentioned it very early, they weren't on board with it," Ms Valentine said. "But later down the track, I think they realised how much I actually didn't belong in school, or they realised how much I wanted to do other things." Riley Valentine has never regretted leaving school early. She now works full time in a childcare centre looking after and educating three- and four-year-olds, something she knew from early high school was her career path. Ms Valentine, 21, left school at the end of year 11 and got her qualifications at TAFE in Sydney. "Me sitting through things that don't interest me at all - I didn't see the point to follow through if I knew what I wanted to do," she said. "It was easier access [than university] in the way that I could get in and do it earlier." Ms Valentine is not alone. More than 20 per cent of all Australian students drop out before the end of year 12 - and the rate is higher at government schools where one in four don't finish. The proportion of children completing high school has been steadily declining in Australia over the past 10 years, with some variation, according to the latest Productivity Commission Report on Government Services. In 2017, the retention rate for full time students in years 10 to 12 was 83.3 per cent. By 2024, that had dropped to 79.9 per cent. The same year the retention rate at public schools was 74.3 per cent, down from 79.8 per cent seven years earlier, although a slight increase since 2023. The head of research and advocacy at The Smith Family, Anne Hampshire, said there were two groups of early leavers and the first had positive post-school experiences, with a clear career pathway through apprenticeships and other vocational training. The second group was more cause for concern. "What's happening to them is they're being pushed out of school, in inverted commas, for a range of reasons. "And that could be they've had poor literacy and numeracy, they're not doing very well academically; they start to fall behind, they can't catch up," she said. They could even be bullied, have mental health problems, complex home lives - or a combination of these. "Some of them, they can't see the purpose in completing year 12," Ms Hampshire said. "And so, for them, they end up drifting out of school by these much more negative factors." Ms Hampshire said there was a strong link between finishing year 12 and positive work and study outcomes post-school. "Their engagement in post-school employment, education, training is much more precarious and uncertain, which is not good for them individually, but it's also not good for us as a nation," she said. Having ready access to dedicated careers advice in school was increasingly important as the skills needed for jobs became more sophisticated in a rapidly-changing, knowledge-based economy. "Many young people across the country aren't getting that high quality career support," Ms Hampshire said. "They might have one careers advisor for a large school of 1200 students." Efforts to lift literacy and numeracy levels at a primary school level were also crucial after the latest NAPLAN results showed about one in three students fell short of basic standards. And Ms Hampshire said children from poorer backgrounds and regional areas needed additional assistance to stay in school. But for Riley Valentine, there are no regrets - and even her parents eventually warmed to the idea of her quitting school in favour of TAFE. "At the start, because I mentioned it very early, they weren't on board with it," Ms Valentine said. "But later down the track, I think they realised how much I actually didn't belong in school, or they realised how much I wanted to do other things." Riley Valentine has never regretted leaving school early. She now works full time in a childcare centre looking after and educating three- and four-year-olds, something she knew from early high school was her career path. Ms Valentine, 21, left school at the end of year 11 and got her qualifications at TAFE in Sydney. "Me sitting through things that don't interest me at all - I didn't see the point to follow through if I knew what I wanted to do," she said. "It was easier access [than university] in the way that I could get in and do it earlier." Ms Valentine is not alone. More than 20 per cent of all Australian students drop out before the end of year 12 - and the rate is higher at government schools where one in four don't finish. The proportion of children completing high school has been steadily declining in Australia over the past 10 years, with some variation, according to the latest Productivity Commission Report on Government Services. In 2017, the retention rate for full time students in years 10 to 12 was 83.3 per cent. By 2024, that had dropped to 79.9 per cent. The same year the retention rate at public schools was 74.3 per cent, down from 79.8 per cent seven years earlier, although a slight increase since 2023. The head of research and advocacy at The Smith Family, Anne Hampshire, said there were two groups of early leavers and the first had positive post-school experiences, with a clear career pathway through apprenticeships and other vocational training. The second group was more cause for concern. "What's happening to them is they're being pushed out of school, in inverted commas, for a range of reasons. "And that could be they've had poor literacy and numeracy, they're not doing very well academically; they start to fall behind, they can't catch up," she said. They could even be bullied, have mental health problems, complex home lives - or a combination of these. "Some of them, they can't see the purpose in completing year 12," Ms Hampshire said. "And so, for them, they end up drifting out of school by these much more negative factors." Ms Hampshire said there was a strong link between finishing year 12 and positive work and study outcomes post-school. "Their engagement in post-school employment, education, training is much more precarious and uncertain, which is not good for them individually, but it's also not good for us as a nation," she said. Having ready access to dedicated careers advice in school was increasingly important as the skills needed for jobs became more sophisticated in a rapidly-changing, knowledge-based economy. "Many young people across the country aren't getting that high quality career support," Ms Hampshire said. "They might have one careers advisor for a large school of 1200 students." Efforts to lift literacy and numeracy levels at a primary school level were also crucial after the latest NAPLAN results showed about one in three students fell short of basic standards. And Ms Hampshire said children from poorer backgrounds and regional areas needed additional assistance to stay in school. But for Riley Valentine, there are no regrets - and even her parents eventually warmed to the idea of her quitting school in favour of TAFE. "At the start, because I mentioned it very early, they weren't on board with it," Ms Valentine said. "But later down the track, I think they realised how much I actually didn't belong in school, or they realised how much I wanted to do other things."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store