logo
Bullied, slut-shamed, overworked: why Australia could lose an ‘entire generation' of school principals

Bullied, slut-shamed, overworked: why Australia could lose an ‘entire generation' of school principals

The Guardian30-03-2025

Angela Falkenberg has been called a 'bitch dog' while principal of a primary school. She has colleagues who have been slut-shamed, she says, and threatened with having their throats slit.
The president of the Australian Primary Principals Association (Appa) has had four decades in the education system, and says 'every year, behaviour gets worse'.
'I'm frustrated by the almost normalisation of it,' she says.
Without urgent reforms, Australia could lose an 'entire generation' of principals, a new report has found, as they grapple with depression and anxiety due to growing workloads, physical violence and bullying.
The Australian Catholic University's (ACU) latest principal health, safety and wellbeing report, released on Monday, surveyed 2,182 school leaders in 2024, representing more than a fifth of principals.
It found instances of physical violence had increased by 82% since the survey started in 2011, while threats of violence were also at their highest rate in the same period, with teachers grappling with weapons brought to schoolyards, having to break up fights and, in some instances, being bitten.
Amid the challenging workplace conditions and high workloads, more than half (53%) of principals surveyed signalled an intention to quit – a slight decrease on 2023 (56%), but jumping to 82% for those with low job satisfaction.
Queensland school leaders recorded the highest intention to quit (58%) while ACT had the lowest (44%). The report found that based on the current trend, about 500 principals could end up abandoning the role.
World-leading educational psychologist and co-chief investigator Prof Herb Marsh says mental health challenges in the profession continue to escalate.
In 2024, 9% of participants recorded a severe score for anxiety, compared with just 1-5% of the general population, the report said. Levels of depression were also significantly higher than in the general population, with 7% of those surveyed recording a severe score, compared with 1.5% of Australians.
'Australia risks losing an entire generation of school leaders without urgent reforms,' Marsh says. 'Despite this adversity, school leaders have maintained high levels of resilience and commitment. Their professional dedication is to be applauded.'
Half of principals were subjected to physical violence last year, the survey found, and more than half (54%) experienced threats of violence. Of those threats, 64% came from parents or caregivers; 95% of actual physical violence was carried out by students.
Almost four in 10 (37%) of leaders were affected by bullying, and seven in 10 (74%) experienced a critical incident, defined as an unexpected event that could be a threat to wellbeing.
The most common were violence threats and security threats (44%), followed by student and community deaths (15%) and suicide and suicidal threats (13%).
Some 45% of school principals also triggered a 'red flag' email in 2024 – alerting school leaders to concerning results and the risk of self-harm, occupational health problems or a serious impact on their quality of life.
Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email
Ass Prof Paul Kidson, an ACU educational leadership expert and former school principal, says violent behaviour has ranged from teachers having to physically break up fights in school grounds to children bringing knives to school, throwing tables down corridors or physically biting and bruising school leaders.
In one instance detailed in the report, a NT principal alleged a 'loaded firearm' had been pointed at them and they had been told they would be shot.
Kidson says there has also been an increase in 'inappropriate and appalling language' used by parents and caregivers on social media platforms.
'I've had a school leader tell me: 'Years ago, if someone said they needed to wear a body cam I would recoil in horror, but now I wonder if I ought to',' he says.
'How did we get to the point where people's really inappropriate behaviour is seen as something we have to tolerate?' Falkenberg asks.
'It's become a low trust environment … adults are reporting: 'My child wouldn't do that, you're lying,' to the point some [teachers] have had to resort to CCTV to play back to parents.'
Kidson says a societal shift is playing out in schools, noting an escalating culture of male superiority and misogynistic views that has drawn concern from gender equity groups.
'When you see how Andrew Tate, Dana White have impacted impressionable young men, why are we surprised when that turns up in schools?' Kidson says.
'I don't think some of public discourse is helpful. We see bullish, belligerent behaviour rewarded. Kids think: 'That's how I navigate life'.'
The report found heavy workloads and a lack of time to focus on teaching and learning remained the top two sources of stress, followed by student-related issues – such as behavioural problems – and the mental health of staff and students.
It made a series of recommendations, highlighting addressing heavy workloads and prioritising wellbeing support as pressing concerns.
Kidson says school leaders perform a role akin to CEOs, but battle unsustainable workloads and conditions that wouldn't be tolerated in other industries.
According to 2025 Seek data, the average principal salary is between $180,000 and $200,000 a year. The report found that principals worked an average of 54.5 hours per week during term time.
'What we've seen over past decades is an increasing number of social, emotional and mental health challenges [of students], and teachers have not been trained to deal with those,' Kidson says.
Kidson says despite the 'outstanding success' of the sector's significant wins in recent months – including Labor's school funding agreement and the education minister's convening of a national principal reference group last June - they needbipartisan support to continue in the next term of government. He is urging the Coalition to match Labor's funding.
'Many principals feel we've finally started moving in the right direction, and we can't afford to lose that momentum,' he says.
'The work of school principals is often governed by people who aren't directly involved in it – that's where a reference group becomes important. These are the types of things that should be quarantined from political point scoring.'
Co-chief investigator of the survey and leading school wellbeing expert, Prof Theresa Dicke, says despite the spike in violence, school leaders showed surprisingly high levels of job satisfaction.
'We need all school leaders to find their work satisfying, helping those who don't is now even more urgent given they are the ones likely to leave,' she said.
'School leaders' health and wellbeing is important in itself but has an effect on student outcomes and vice versa. If teachers are satisfied in their jobs, students are more likely to achieve.'
Are you a teacher or a parent who's noticed new behavioural trends in Australian schools? Contact caitlin.cassidy@theguardian.com
In Australia, support is available at Beyond Blue on 1300 22 4636, Lifeline on 13 11 14, and at MensLine on 1300 789 978. In the UK, the charity Mind is available on 0300 123 3393 and Childline on 0800 1111. In the US, call or text Mental Health America at 988 or chat 988lifeline.org.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘What if I just didn't drink this': the question that changed everything
‘What if I just didn't drink this': the question that changed everything

The Guardian

time2 days ago

  • The Guardian

‘What if I just didn't drink this': the question that changed everything

For most of her 20s, Jamie* mastered the art of keeping things on the surface. She was the funny one, the party starter, the friend who never said no to another round of drinks. To friends and colleagues, she seemed effortlessly confident. But beneath the banter and bravado was a deep discomfort – with silence, with vulnerability, and most of all, with herself. 'I didn't even realise I was numbing anything,' she told me in one of our recent therapy sessions. 'I just thought I liked to have fun. But looking back, I was terrified of feeling anything real.' Jamie, now 39, is part of a growing number of Australians rethinking their relationship with alcohol. For her, drinking wasn't just a habit, it was a coping mechanism – although she was the last one to realise this. She was drinking to blur the edges. There wasn't a traumatic event that she could remember, but because feeling sad or lonely or anxious felt unbearable, alcohol helped her skip past that. It worked – until it didn't. Her 'bottom' wasn't dramatic; she told me in one session it was more like a slow hollowing, and she got tired of waking up feeling like a stranger to herself. The turning point came in the early months of the pandemic. Isolated from friends, stripped of distractions, she began to realise how often she reached for wine to fill the space. 'One night I was sitting alone with a glass of pinot, and I remember thinking – what would happen if I didn't drink this?' That question changed everything. Jamie decided to stop drinking 'just for a month'. But when the fog began to lift, she couldn't go back. She describes early sobriety as raw and revealing. She was suddenly face to face with everything she pushed away for years – grief, anxiety, even joy – and it became overwhelming. Alcohol addiction is often less about the substance itself, and more about what it helps a person avoid. From a clinical standpoint, we understand alcohol not just as a chemical dependency, but as an emotional anaesthetic – one that temporarily blunts the nervous system's distress signals. Many individuals who struggle with problematic drinking patterns may have started out chasing pleasure and to be social; but consistent reliance upon alcohol can result in using it to flee pain such as unprocessed grief, chronic stress, shame, anxiety or trauma. The neurobiology of addiction reveals that alcohol activates the brain's reward system while simultaneously suppressing the prefrontal cortex, impairing emotional regulation and decision-making. In this way, alcohol becomes a fast, accessible tool for short-term relief – even if it compounds emotional dysregulation in the long term. What makes this cycle so complex is that emotional numbing isn't always conscious. Clients often present in therapy describing 'overwhelm', 'flatness' or 'disconnection', without immediately recognising that these are signs of emotional avoidance – and that alcohol has become part of that equation. Therapy helps illuminate the underlying patterns: how early attachment dynamics, adverse childhood experiences or unresolved trauma may have shaped a person's tolerance for emotional discomfort. A trauma-informed approach encourages clients to build somatic awareness, develop emotional literacy and begin tolerating – rather than bypassing – their internal experience. Recovery, then, is not only about abstaining from alcohol; it's about being able to stay present with what's real and building a nervous system that can feel without needing to flee. In group therapy with professional guidance, Jamie started to see how she had numbed her emotions and buried the difficulties she had experienced in her life. 'I sat with just me,' she recalled. 'And I started crying and couldn't stop. It felt like every emotion I'd stored was finally being released.' I encouraged Jamie to begin journalling daily and start each entry with the question: 'What am I feeling today?' Sometimes she said it was anger. Sometimes relief. Sometimes nothing at all. Jamie finally allowed herself to feel – not with fear, but with curiosity. Our emotions can serve as signposts, gently pointing us toward the places where healing is needed: our blockages, our numbness and the parts of us that have gone quiet in the face of hopelessness. Recovery – from drinking, from disconnection, from self-avoidance – isn't linear, and Jamie is still in that process. But what's changed is her willingness to stay with herself, especially when things feel hard. Jamie is one of many emerging in what some call the 'sober curious' movement. But for her, it's not about labels or lifestyle – it's about presence. She's not interested in moralising alcohol use. It's not about judging drinking. It's about asking why. Why am I drinking? What am I avoiding? Can I support myself with awareness? And what might be possible if I stopped? In a culture where numbing is easy – scroll, sip, swipe – choosing to feel can feel too hard. It's important to take at least one quiet moment a day to ask yourself: What am I feeling? You might be surprised by the answer. * All clients discussed are fictional amalgams Diane Young is a trauma specialist and psychotherapist at South Pacific Private, a trauma, addiction and mental health treatment centre In Australia, support is available at Beyond Blue on 1300 22 4636, Lifeline on 13 11 14, and at MensLine on 1300 789 978. In the UK, the charity Mind is available on 0300 123 3393 and Childline on 0800 1111. In the US, call or text Mental Health America at 988 or chat

Why Aussie shoppers can't get enough of 'flattering' $40 item with over 1,000 five-star reviews: 'Absolute dream'
Why Aussie shoppers can't get enough of 'flattering' $40 item with over 1,000 five-star reviews: 'Absolute dream'

Daily Mail​

time28-05-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Why Aussie shoppers can't get enough of 'flattering' $40 item with over 1,000 five-star reviews: 'Absolute dream'

A multi-use lip product is fast becoming a daily skincare essential for thousands of Australians. IMBIBE's Collagen Lips Peptide Treatment is a balm, mask, gloss, and treatment in one, backed by more than a 1,000 five-star reviews from customers thrilled with their results. Infused with collagen peptides that dissolve on contact, the $40 product deeply hydrates while visibly plumping and smoothing for fuller, cushion-soft, luscious lips. As many have learned the hard way, traditional lip balms tend to deliver a temporary dose of relief to chapped lips, only to have you feeling parched and reaching for the product again an hour later. But Collagen Lips is packed with nourishing Vitamin E, Coconut, and Shea Butter to lock in moisture, restoring plump, cushiony lips that are deeply hydrated and smooth— no chapping or painful cracks. It's the perfect buy if your lips are suffering in the cooler temperatures of autumn and winter. In a consumer study, a staggering 100 per cent of participants 'agreed it is effective in improving the moisture of lips after a single use**' and said that Collagen Lips had 'improved overall lips appearance**.' The skin of the lips is especially vulnerable to ageing and environmental stressors, often showing early signs such as loss of volume, fine lines, wrinkles, and reduced elasticity. The IMBIBE website is filled with rave reviews and before-and-after photos from happy customers. 'I love the rich texture of the Collagen Lips in Bare Silk. It feels very nourishing for dry lips and they definitely feel plumper afterwards. This colour is so versatile and sure to become a new everyday staple of mine,' one raved. 'Obsessed. I put it on at night before bed, lips no longer dry and cracked in the morning,' another shared. Many loyal fans revealed it's the one beauty product they always repurchase while others described the shades as 'flattering'. 'This is my fourth jar of collagen lip balm. I usually get dry lips especially as the weather starts to change, and this is the only balm that has truly helped me keep them not only hydrated but adding a beautiful natural color to my lips. I absolutely love it. Best healing lip balm ever,' one said. 'I have repurchased three times. It's my daily and nightly balm, so smooth, hydrating and moisturising. It nourishes and pumps my lips and I use it as a sleep mask on them, I even put the remnants on my cuticles dab on my cheek bones for highlight. I'm absolutely in love with all of my IMBIBE balms,' another added. 'Awesome lip nourishment. The experience was beneficial for the health of my lips - the residual colour was very flattering,' one raved. Some revealed the darker shades were the perfect alternative to lipsticks. 'The Collagen Lips in Rich Red is the perfect alternative to using lipstick (which often contains nasty ingredients). A small amount goes a long way. For me, I found that using a light dab gave me a beautiful flushed lip colour,' one shopper raved. 'Unlike traditional lipstick which makes your lips look and feel dry, I found that this product kept my lips hydrated throughout the day. I'm also very impressed with how long the tint stays on your lips. I loved combining the OG Collagen lips with the new Rich Red! This product is super versatile and a must have.' The lip treatment comes in three shades: Bare Silk, Plum Honey and Rich Red. Bare Silk is perfect for overnight wear, or a no makeup look. This clear shade elevates your natural lip colour with the all-natural light-reflecting pigment making them look fuller and plumper. For a pop of colour, the Plum Honey delivers a dash of rich burgundy hue to your lips. The buildable colour can vary from a subtle flush to an eye-catching pop of pigment that flatters all skin tones. Rich Red is the most pigmented shade, in a bright berry red with pink tones. Like Plum Honey, the colour is buildable, with one layer a sheer gloss, to a more impactful lipstick effect with two to three applications. Bioactive collagen peptides melt into the lips to help boost collagen and elastin, visibly smoothing and plumping. IMBIBE's Signature Fatty Acid Complex then locks in the peptides to keep lips moisturised for longer. All-natural light-reflecting pigment spheres make the lips look fuller, bouncier, and plumper. IMBIBE was founded by Felicity Evans, 43, 11 years ago and has grown into a globally recognised brand in topical and ingestible beauty and wellness Collagen Lips Peptide Treatment is just one of IMBIBE's offering of skincare and ingestible beauty and wellness products beloved by loyal customers in Australia and globally. IMBIBE was founded by Felicity Evans, 43, over a decade ago in her own kitchen, originally in an effort to fix her own hair and skin concerns, as well as gut health and fertility issues. 'What started as a personal wellness experiment has grown into a global wellness brand,' Felicity told Daily Mail Australia. IMBIBE's newest offering in their ingestible wellness range is hot chocolate supplement drink RECOVER REST, $55 'A desire for meticulous formulation and transformative results continues to propel us forward, our team of leading microbiologists, chemists and nutritionists strive to create holistic wellness products that are 100 per cent clean - no fillers, no artificial flavours, no nasties, just clinical-level actives that work.' The brand's bestsellers include their cult Miracle Collagen, $50 for 100g, which boasts 2,446 five-star reviews. Award-winning Collagen Eyes, $105, is a concentrated formula that infuses skin with 'intense hydration, nourishing fatty acids and clinically proven collagen peptides to actively target wrinkle depth reduction and brightness to the skin.' IMBIBE's newest offering in their ingestible wellness range is hot chocolate supplement drink RECOVER REST, $55 for 200g. The five-in-one complex contains Magnesium for nervous system support and muscle recovery, and Amino acids L-Glycine and L-Tryptophan to promote calm and deepen sleep cycles. The calming drink works to regulate cortisol, boost melatonin, and promote collagen and elastin. All products are available on a subscription, saving customers 15 per cent on their purchases.

Major Medicare change coming for Australians after Anthony Albanese's historic election win: What you need to know
Major Medicare change coming for Australians after Anthony Albanese's historic election win: What you need to know

Daily Mail​

time04-05-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Major Medicare change coming for Australians after Anthony Albanese's historic election win: What you need to know

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will invest millions in a new free nationwide health advice line, aimed at easing pressure on hospitals. Expected to launch in January, the new 1800-Medicare service will let Australians call any time to speak with a nurse, with free GP telehealth consultations available for urgent issues. Labor says the service could prevent up to 250,000 unnecessary visits to emergency departments each year by giving people a safer, more convenient alternative for after-hours care. 'Life isn't 9 to 5. With 1800-Medicare, neither is health care,' Mr Albanese said. 'Whether your family needs urgent or ongoing health care, under Labor, Medicare will be there for all Australians, in every community.' Anyone who needs urgent GP care for something like an emergency prescription or treatment for a short-term illness or injury, can be connected to a free telehealth consultation with a GP between 6pm and 8am. 'Whether you need expert health advice or reassurance, the registered nurses at 1800-Medicare will be there all day, every day, to provide advice and refer you to the health service you need – whether that's your regular GP, the local hospital or a Medicare Urgent Care Clinic,' minister for health Mark Butler said. 'If you need urgent GP care that can't wait for your regular GP to be available, the triage nurses will connect you to a free telehealth session with a 1800MEDICARE GP via phone or video, available all weekend and weeknights between 6pm and 8am. 'A 1800-Medicare GP will provide the free care you need, like an emergency prescription for your regular medication, or treatment for an illness or injury.' Campaigning on reducing living costs, Mr Albanese made health a focal point during the election. He frequently held up his Medicare card as a symbol of his commitment, promising to expand access to bulk billing and urgent care clinics. In his election night speech, he again held up his Medicare card to reinforce that message. 'We will be a government that helps every Australian who relies on Medicare,' Albanese told the cheering crowd. 'Because this card is not Labor red or Liberal blue, it is green and gold,' he said. 'It is a declaration of our national values, in our national colours. 'Medicare belongs to all Australians and together we will make it stronger for all Australians.' With 70 per cent of the vote counted, Labor has won 85 seats with the coalition going backwards to sit on 35 seats, while 19 seats remain in doubt. Labor saw large swings across multiple states, booting the coalition out of all seats in Tasmania and Adelaide, while making significant gains in opposition heartland in Queensland.

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