logo
Productivity Commission says teachers should be given better lesson plans to boost productivity, results

Productivity Commission says teachers should be given better lesson plans to boost productivity, results

West Australian8 hours ago
Teachers should be able to draw from a national database of lesson plans and support materials as they grapple with increasingly complex demands from students with a wide range of abilities.
The Productivity Commission says Australia must focus on addressing stagnation in school students' achievements to make sure they leave with the skills they need to take on further education and be able to find jobs.
In the latest of its 'five pillars' reports looking at tackling sluggish productivity, the commission says outcomes at schools are stagnating and more students are leaving school without 'foundational skills' in reading, writing and maths.
Teachers are spending too much time doing things unrelated to preparing for lessons despite working on average 52 hours a week, don't always have access to materials to help them, and too many are having to teach outside their areas of expertise.
There's also a big problem with the broad range of abilities of students in any one class, leading to a 'challenging and complex' job for teachers to meet all their needs.
'The academic abilities of students in any one class is wide and teachers are under huge pressure to produce quality materials for all of them,' commissioner Catherine de Fontenay said.
'We need to give our teachers time and support to do the thing they do best – teach.'
The report concludes the best way to increase productivity in schools is to give all teachers easy access to high-quality lesson planning materials and advanced educational technology including artificial intelligence, such as chatbots.
At the moment, the resources available to teachers largely depend on where they are – some States (including WA) have centralised pools of resources, but not all, and access and quality can vary across sectors.
This has also lead to duplication in funding across States developing syllabuses and lesson plans.
The PC recommends the Commonwealth step in and set up a single platform where teachers across the country, in public and private schools, can access a full bank of high-quality lesson planning materials that cover components of the national curriculum.
It also says there should be a national approach to the use of technology.
This would better share the best innovations across all schools and help teachers tailor their teaching to the level of all students in their class, including those who are struggling.
Even modest improvements in student achievements would lead to big benefits for the nation down the track, with PC modelling showing boosting in NAPLAN scores between 1.4 and 4.3 per cent could lift GDP by 2 per cent in the long term.
Teachers called for better investment in schools, preschools, TAFE and education support staff at a discussion led by Education Minister Jason Clare on Friday, ahead of next week's economic reform roundtable.
The Australian Education Union wants the government to set up a national commission for teaching, in line with a recommendation from the UN.
'We must urgently address teacher shortages and the unsustainable workloads facing the teaching profession and back Australia's teachers with the resources that they need,' AEU federal president Correna Haythorpe said.
'Every student, no matter where they live or what their background, deserves access to a full range of senior secondary academic and vocational subjects that can open up their future work pathways.'
The PC's skills and education report released on Sunday night also recommends that states dump licensing regimes for some jobs where there is little evidence that registration improves outcomes, including for mechanics and painters in WA.
At the moment, painters in WA must have a license if they're going to do more than paint about two rooms on any job – a scheme the Commission says has no bearing on safety or quality and should be scrapped.
It also calls for smoother pathways in both directions between university and vocational education, and lower financial barriers for small and medium businesses that want to help their workers do training.
Jim Chalmers has received more than 900 submissions plus input from some 41 roundtable meetings held by ministerial colleagues ahead of next week's mini-summit.
The Treasurer has cautioned people to temper their expectations and recognise the roundtable is most likely to result in broad reform directions for the government this term rather than lots of fully formed policies.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Go to school on AI to ease teacher load, treasurer told
Go to school on AI to ease teacher load, treasurer told

The Advertiser

timean hour ago

  • The Advertiser

Go to school on AI to ease teacher load, treasurer told

Schools should use artificial intelligence to ease the load on teachers and tackle educational inequity, the government's productivity adviser says. The Productivity Commission also recommended financial incentives for businesses to train workers and to reduce barriers to occupational training in the fourth of five reports it is releasing ahead of the government's economic reform roundtable. Building the nation's skills base is an important part of turning around Australia's ailing productivity performance, the commission found. "A thriving, adaptable workforce will give us the productivity growth we need to see higher wages and better living standards," deputy chair Alex Robson said. "As the pace of change in work and technology continues to accelerate, we need to ensure that workers can acquire the skills they'll need to thrive." The federal government should provide "national leadership" on educational technology and AI in schools, the report recommended. It is hoped the changes would arrest the decline in Australians' foundational skills, which allow workers to learn new abilities and are essential to improving productivity. National education bodies should establish a framework for assessing the quality of edtech tools, undertake a stocktake of what tools are being used and recommend tools for teachers across Australia to use, the commission said. State and territory governments were told to provide professional development and support for teachers to adopt and use AI tools effectively. The report urged the government to create a single nationwide online platform of planning materials for teachers across all states and territories to access. This would particularly help teachers in remote areas or who instruct classes outside of their field of expertise. Promoting the use of AI in schools was one of the recommendations put forward by ChatGPT owner OpenAI in an economic blueprint for Australia released by the Silicon Valley-based tech giant in June. Treasurer Jim Chalmers welcomed the report, saying the government was grateful for the commission's work "in helping us think through some of the big challenges in our economy". "The reason that our government is obsessed with productivity in our economy is because it's the best way to lift living standards over time," he said, as he prepared for his roundtable of business, unions, experts and civil society next week. "Our investments and reforms to boost our human capital are a big part of that, helping workers around the country earn more and keep more of what they earn. "As a Labor government, we'll always back and invest in our workers to make sure we build the human capital and skills we need to grasp the opportunities of the defining decade ahead." While the summit provides a good opportunity for the government to tackle the challenges facing the nation's economy, it came with risks as well, said Zareh Ghazarian, head of Monash University's politics and international relations discipline. "The challenge for the government will be how it manages the expectation that this event will make a real and positive impact on the community," he said. "Politically, entertaining questions on tax reform and productivity may be challenging for the Albanese government, especially as some arguments may go against its policy preferences." Schools should use artificial intelligence to ease the load on teachers and tackle educational inequity, the government's productivity adviser says. The Productivity Commission also recommended financial incentives for businesses to train workers and to reduce barriers to occupational training in the fourth of five reports it is releasing ahead of the government's economic reform roundtable. Building the nation's skills base is an important part of turning around Australia's ailing productivity performance, the commission found. "A thriving, adaptable workforce will give us the productivity growth we need to see higher wages and better living standards," deputy chair Alex Robson said. "As the pace of change in work and technology continues to accelerate, we need to ensure that workers can acquire the skills they'll need to thrive." The federal government should provide "national leadership" on educational technology and AI in schools, the report recommended. It is hoped the changes would arrest the decline in Australians' foundational skills, which allow workers to learn new abilities and are essential to improving productivity. National education bodies should establish a framework for assessing the quality of edtech tools, undertake a stocktake of what tools are being used and recommend tools for teachers across Australia to use, the commission said. State and territory governments were told to provide professional development and support for teachers to adopt and use AI tools effectively. The report urged the government to create a single nationwide online platform of planning materials for teachers across all states and territories to access. This would particularly help teachers in remote areas or who instruct classes outside of their field of expertise. Promoting the use of AI in schools was one of the recommendations put forward by ChatGPT owner OpenAI in an economic blueprint for Australia released by the Silicon Valley-based tech giant in June. Treasurer Jim Chalmers welcomed the report, saying the government was grateful for the commission's work "in helping us think through some of the big challenges in our economy". "The reason that our government is obsessed with productivity in our economy is because it's the best way to lift living standards over time," he said, as he prepared for his roundtable of business, unions, experts and civil society next week. "Our investments and reforms to boost our human capital are a big part of that, helping workers around the country earn more and keep more of what they earn. "As a Labor government, we'll always back and invest in our workers to make sure we build the human capital and skills we need to grasp the opportunities of the defining decade ahead." While the summit provides a good opportunity for the government to tackle the challenges facing the nation's economy, it came with risks as well, said Zareh Ghazarian, head of Monash University's politics and international relations discipline. "The challenge for the government will be how it manages the expectation that this event will make a real and positive impact on the community," he said. "Politically, entertaining questions on tax reform and productivity may be challenging for the Albanese government, especially as some arguments may go against its policy preferences." Schools should use artificial intelligence to ease the load on teachers and tackle educational inequity, the government's productivity adviser says. The Productivity Commission also recommended financial incentives for businesses to train workers and to reduce barriers to occupational training in the fourth of five reports it is releasing ahead of the government's economic reform roundtable. Building the nation's skills base is an important part of turning around Australia's ailing productivity performance, the commission found. "A thriving, adaptable workforce will give us the productivity growth we need to see higher wages and better living standards," deputy chair Alex Robson said. "As the pace of change in work and technology continues to accelerate, we need to ensure that workers can acquire the skills they'll need to thrive." The federal government should provide "national leadership" on educational technology and AI in schools, the report recommended. It is hoped the changes would arrest the decline in Australians' foundational skills, which allow workers to learn new abilities and are essential to improving productivity. National education bodies should establish a framework for assessing the quality of edtech tools, undertake a stocktake of what tools are being used and recommend tools for teachers across Australia to use, the commission said. State and territory governments were told to provide professional development and support for teachers to adopt and use AI tools effectively. The report urged the government to create a single nationwide online platform of planning materials for teachers across all states and territories to access. This would particularly help teachers in remote areas or who instruct classes outside of their field of expertise. Promoting the use of AI in schools was one of the recommendations put forward by ChatGPT owner OpenAI in an economic blueprint for Australia released by the Silicon Valley-based tech giant in June. Treasurer Jim Chalmers welcomed the report, saying the government was grateful for the commission's work "in helping us think through some of the big challenges in our economy". "The reason that our government is obsessed with productivity in our economy is because it's the best way to lift living standards over time," he said, as he prepared for his roundtable of business, unions, experts and civil society next week. "Our investments and reforms to boost our human capital are a big part of that, helping workers around the country earn more and keep more of what they earn. "As a Labor government, we'll always back and invest in our workers to make sure we build the human capital and skills we need to grasp the opportunities of the defining decade ahead." While the summit provides a good opportunity for the government to tackle the challenges facing the nation's economy, it came with risks as well, said Zareh Ghazarian, head of Monash University's politics and international relations discipline. "The challenge for the government will be how it manages the expectation that this event will make a real and positive impact on the community," he said. "Politically, entertaining questions on tax reform and productivity may be challenging for the Albanese government, especially as some arguments may go against its policy preferences." Schools should use artificial intelligence to ease the load on teachers and tackle educational inequity, the government's productivity adviser says. The Productivity Commission also recommended financial incentives for businesses to train workers and to reduce barriers to occupational training in the fourth of five reports it is releasing ahead of the government's economic reform roundtable. Building the nation's skills base is an important part of turning around Australia's ailing productivity performance, the commission found. "A thriving, adaptable workforce will give us the productivity growth we need to see higher wages and better living standards," deputy chair Alex Robson said. "As the pace of change in work and technology continues to accelerate, we need to ensure that workers can acquire the skills they'll need to thrive." The federal government should provide "national leadership" on educational technology and AI in schools, the report recommended. It is hoped the changes would arrest the decline in Australians' foundational skills, which allow workers to learn new abilities and are essential to improving productivity. National education bodies should establish a framework for assessing the quality of edtech tools, undertake a stocktake of what tools are being used and recommend tools for teachers across Australia to use, the commission said. State and territory governments were told to provide professional development and support for teachers to adopt and use AI tools effectively. The report urged the government to create a single nationwide online platform of planning materials for teachers across all states and territories to access. This would particularly help teachers in remote areas or who instruct classes outside of their field of expertise. Promoting the use of AI in schools was one of the recommendations put forward by ChatGPT owner OpenAI in an economic blueprint for Australia released by the Silicon Valley-based tech giant in June. Treasurer Jim Chalmers welcomed the report, saying the government was grateful for the commission's work "in helping us think through some of the big challenges in our economy". "The reason that our government is obsessed with productivity in our economy is because it's the best way to lift living standards over time," he said, as he prepared for his roundtable of business, unions, experts and civil society next week. "Our investments and reforms to boost our human capital are a big part of that, helping workers around the country earn more and keep more of what they earn. "As a Labor government, we'll always back and invest in our workers to make sure we build the human capital and skills we need to grasp the opportunities of the defining decade ahead." While the summit provides a good opportunity for the government to tackle the challenges facing the nation's economy, it came with risks as well, said Zareh Ghazarian, head of Monash University's politics and international relations discipline. "The challenge for the government will be how it manages the expectation that this event will make a real and positive impact on the community," he said. "Politically, entertaining questions on tax reform and productivity may be challenging for the Albanese government, especially as some arguments may go against its policy preferences."

Go to school on AI to ease teacher load, treasurer told
Go to school on AI to ease teacher load, treasurer told

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

Go to school on AI to ease teacher load, treasurer told

Schools should use artificial intelligence to ease the load on teachers and tackle educational inequity, the government's productivity adviser says. The Productivity Commission also recommended financial incentives for businesses to train workers and to reduce barriers to occupational training in the fourth of five reports it is releasing ahead of the government's economic reform roundtable. Building the nation's skills base is an important part of turning around Australia's ailing productivity performance, the commission found. "A thriving, adaptable workforce will give us the productivity growth we need to see higher wages and better living standards," deputy chair Alex Robson said. "As the pace of change in work and technology continues to accelerate, we need to ensure that workers can acquire the skills they'll need to thrive." The federal government should provide "national leadership" on educational technology and AI in schools, the report recommended. It is hoped the changes would arrest the decline in Australians' foundational skills, which allow workers to learn new abilities and are essential to improving productivity. National education bodies should establish a framework for assessing the quality of edtech tools, undertake a stocktake of what tools are being used and recommend tools for teachers across Australia to use, the commission said. State and territory governments were told to provide professional development and support for teachers to adopt and use AI tools effectively. The report urged the government to create a single nationwide online platform of planning materials for teachers across all states and territories to access. This would particularly help teachers in remote areas or who instruct classes outside of their field of expertise. Promoting the use of AI in schools was one of the recommendations put forward by ChatGPT owner OpenAI in an economic blueprint for Australia released by the Silicon Valley-based tech giant in June. Treasurer Jim Chalmers welcomed the report, saying the government was grateful for the commission's work "in helping us think through some of the big challenges in our economy". "The reason that our government is obsessed with productivity in our economy is because it's the best way to lift living standards over time," he said, as he prepared for his roundtable of business, unions, experts and civil society next week. "Our investments and reforms to boost our human capital are a big part of that, helping workers around the country earn more and keep more of what they earn. "As a Labor government, we'll always back and invest in our workers to make sure we build the human capital and skills we need to grasp the opportunities of the defining decade ahead." While the summit provides a good opportunity for the government to tackle the challenges facing the nation's economy, it came with risks as well, said Zareh Ghazarian, head of Monash University's politics and international relations discipline. "The challenge for the government will be how it manages the expectation that this event will make a real and positive impact on the community," he said. "Politically, entertaining questions on tax reform and productivity may be challenging for the Albanese government, especially as some arguments may go against its policy preferences."

Super rule changes to help younger savers, wealthy Australians hit with the new super tax
Super rule changes to help younger savers, wealthy Australians hit with the new super tax

The Australian

timean hour ago

  • The Australian

Super rule changes to help younger savers, wealthy Australians hit with the new super tax

The government's new super tax has triggered a much wider push to review superannuation rules, with the looming economic summit set to become a forum for change. With the controversial new 15 per cent tax on amounts above $3m yet to be set in stone, the economic summit, which kicks of on August 19, will hear calls to cut benefits for the very wealthy but also to improve super benefits for younger savers. The Commonwealth Bank and the Grattan Institute have already supported wealth taxes for older and richer investors. But those calls are now being balanced with a push to let younger, less wealthy investors gain more access to super through increased contribution caps. Top advisory firm BDO Australia has sent a shot across the bows with a provocative call to open up the amount investors are allowed to contribute into super each year. At present, the pre-tax contribution limit is $30,000 per annum – an amount unchanged from a decade ago. In contrast, the amount older and wealthier Australians can have tax-free in super is $2m – up from an initial level of $1.6m when it was first legislated in 2017. Similarly, the post-tax contribution limit is $110,00 amount compared to levels of $180,000 in the past. Lance Cunningham, BDO national tax technical leader, said the current settings are inappropriate. 'They offer limited opportunity for people to contribute at the time they most want to do so,' Mr Cunningham said. Super policy is becoming more central to the agenda as the government publicly eliminates other items from the debate, including negative gearing. At the same time, items related to super such as capital gains tax, pension access and family trust rules remain very much in focus. The summit is due to commence before the government nails down the final terms of the new super tax, tagged as Division 296. The prospects of the introduction of the tax being delayed are rising since the government is supposed to begin collecting tax revenue from the measure from July 1 next year with guidance on the treatment of unrealised gains still to be clarified. Two other key issues in super will also be difficult to avoid at the summit, despite a formal focus on productivity: • The regulation of super is back in the spotlight. The lack of a single regulator for super has emerged as a problem for the government in the wake of the First Guardian scandal, now shaping up as the biggest regulatory failure for many years. Supervision of super is split between three regulators: ASIC, APRA and the ATO. Following the First Guardian collapse, The Australian reported last week that ASIC has raised the prospect of limiting superannuation investment options and restricting retail access to high-risk funds, as it warned a root-and-branch response is needed to counter financial services industry misconduct. • Separately, lobbyists from big super funds are pushing the government to review the terms of the performance test in MySuper. Last year, all of the MySuper superannuation funds passed the APRA Your Future, Your Super performance test for the first time, but industry leaders believe conformity in the tests is leading to a lack of innovation in super products. There are now calls for the APRA to broaden the scope of the performance tests to ensure it captures more products and allows for diverse strategies across the sector. Read related topics: Need to know

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store