logo
The new threat facing Australian children in daycare centres

The new threat facing Australian children in daycare centres

Daily Mail​08-07-2025
Experts are concerned that fast-tracked childcare courses could be putting young lives at risk.
Traditional four-year university degrees in early education are being whittled down to just 10-month graduate diplomas as institutions cash in on an industry shortage of teachers and market 'worthless' courses to international students.
The industry has come under the spotlight in recent days after Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Dale Brown, 26, was charged with over 70 child abuse offences, including the sexual penetration of a child and producing child abuse material.
At Southern Cross University in regional NSW, an estimated 6,000 students have enrolled in its 10-month early education graduate diploma in the last two years.
University insiders claim that the majority are international students, including older men in their 40s and 50s with corporate backgrounds.
'Childcare services are recognising that students are quite openly telling them that they are only there to get their permanent residency and that's why they are undertaking the course,' a university insider told ABC's 7.30 program.
Parents should be concerned that people are coming to Australia to study childcare as a pathway to permanent residency, immigration expert Mark Glazbrook says.
'They're looking after our children and in some cases they're not attending their classes,' he told the program.
'There are a lot of education providers that are set up to deliver courses that are worthless, they're useless. This is a big concern.'
University of Sydney early education professor Dr Marianne Fenech said the growing number of international enrolments was a 'cash cow for universities'.
'Employers of high quality services are telling us that the quality of graduates coming out is not what it used to be, it is not as high as it should be,' she said.
Dr Fenech was alarmed to hear claims that students were placed with childcare centres that failed to meet minimum national quality standards.
Southern Cross University told the program that the graduate diploma is a 'rigorous, high quality program' which includes 60 days of practical experience in early childhood education settings.
It is also fully accredited by the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency.
'Within 10 months, our Graduate Diploma in Education (Early Childhood) will prepare you to work in early childhood education and care services, long day care centres, and preschools,' a course description on the university website states.
'Our course covers key areas of early childhood education and care, theory, principles and practices that best support children's learning and development.'
The regulator has since confirmed that it has launched a review into the university.
Daily Mail Australia has contacted Southern Cross University for further comment.
Parents of 1,200 children were advised to consider testing them for sexually transmitted diseases after coming into contact with Brown.
The 26-year-old worked at a total of 20 childcare centres over an eight-year period between January 2017 and May 2025.
Brown was not known to police before his arrest and had a valid Working With Children Check, which has since been cancelled.
Police discovered evidence of the alleged horrific offending by the childcare worker while investigating 36-year-old Michael Simon Wilson.
Wilson, from Hoppers Crossing, was charged with 45 child sex offences on Wednesday, including bestiality, rape and possession of child abuse material, according to court documents.
It is understood Brown and Wilson are known to each other, but Wilson's charges are not linked to any childcare centre and involve different alleged victims.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Crisis in early years education as attainment gap widens, report warns
Crisis in early years education as attainment gap widens, report warns

Sky News

time15 hours ago

  • Sky News

Crisis in early years education as attainment gap widens, report warns

A crisis in early years education has emerged with the attainment gap between students widening since the pandemic, a report has revealed. An annual report from the Education Policy Institute (EPI) found that children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) face the widest attainment gap at 19.9 months in reception year - the largest on record. Particularly, children with SEND and with Education, Health and Care Plans were found by the EPI to have fallen behind their peers. Disadvantaged five-year-olds were also found to be up to one month further behind their more affluent peers compared to 2019. White British pupils have experienced a relative decline in attainment since 2019, the report added, leaving disadvantaged students in this group with some of the lowest achievement levels. And a decline in post-16 engagement was also found, with more than 20% of 16-year-olds not in education or training compared to pre-pandemic levels in 2019. 2:42 Kali Jauncey-Childs, trust lead for early years at Oasis Community Learning and assistant principal at Oasis Academy Warndon in Worcester, told Sky News: "I think a key thing is the early identification of SEND. "We had the Sure Start centres, which were absolutely brilliant at bringing together lots of different services. We had all of the healthcare professionals, speech and language professionals, education all coming together to provide support to children and their families. "Those [services] not existing anymore means that there isn't that early identification as much now, even with the health visitor, especially since the pandemic." Zoe Jackson, assistant headteacher at Woodside Primary School in south London, added: "More children are entering our nursery settings and our reception classes with speech, language delays, difficulties in emotional regulation and emerging needs. "We have been proactive in trying to ensure that all children, regardless of their needs." Natalie Perera, chief executive of the EPI, told Sky News: "Our youngest and most vulnerable learners are still paying the price. "Without swift action, we are baking lifelong disadvantage into the system." In its report, the EPI called on the government to abolish the two-child benefit cap and extend free school meals to pre-school children. The thinktank also called for all teachers trained in child development and SEND identification and urged the government to increase disadvantage funding across all education phases, with a focus on persistently disadvantaged pupils. 6:10 A Department for Education spokesperson said in a statement to Sky News: "This report lays bare the widening disadvantage gap this government inherited, and which we are working flat out to solve through the Plan for Change. "From next year we will be investing £9bn per year in a revitalised early education system that helps get children ready for school - with working parents receiving 30 funded childcare hours per week, an almost 50% increase in early years disadvantage funding, and a strong new focus on improving the quality of reception year education. "Through our new Best Start in Life strategy, we're rolling out Best Start Family Hubs to every local area, and expect to have up to 1,000 hubs running by 2028, with a trained professional supporting families and children with SEND. "Alongside our free breakfast clubs, expansion of free school meals to all households on universal credit and investment in early support for children with SEND, we will turn the tide on these ingrained challenges across the education system." The EPI's annual report compares student attainment in 2024 with pre-pandemic levels in 2019, analysing disparities based on economic disadvantage, gender, ethnicity, English as an additional language, SEND and geography.

EXCLUSIVE The dark side of Australia's cost-of-living crisis exposed
EXCLUSIVE The dark side of Australia's cost-of-living crisis exposed

Daily Mail​

time17 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE The dark side of Australia's cost-of-living crisis exposed

A dark side of Australia's cost-of-living crisis has emerged, with the stress of making ends meet linked to a rise in animal cruelty. RSPCA NSW CEO Steve Coleman told Daily Mail Australia that financial pressures facing millions of Aussies were partly responsible for pets being abused or neglected by their stressed owners. It comes as RSPCA NSW announced it would be temporarily closing its online cruelty reporting portal due to the high volume of complaints. 'Whenever things are tough on the economic front it generally results in an increase in cruelty complaints,' Mr Coleman said. 'In the last couple of years it (animal cruelty complaints) has definitely been related to tight budgets on the home front and people not being able to afford their vet bills.' Mr Coleman, who joined the RSPCA in 1991, said the organisation also had to help victims of domestic violence by taking their pets and looking after them while they found safe accommodation. 'The number of people with pets who have become homeless has also increased. A lot of people with pets haven't been able to afford their mortgages,' Mr Coleman said. 'At the core of it, the economy definitely hasn't helped. There are a lot of social challenges at the moment. It's a tough economy.' The Covid pandemic resulted in a huge demand for animal adoptions which left the RSPCA in NSW with empty shelters. Now, close to 70 per cent of households have a pet and many are struggling to look after them. Animal cruelty isn't limited to physical abuse, it also includes failing to take pets in need of medical assistance to a vet, often because of the costs involved. Mr Coleman said there was currently around 800 animals sitting on a 'surrender' wait list, but the RSPCA doesn't have the capacity to take care of them. 'What we say to them is we can't take the animal right now, but what we can do is try and help you maintain your connection with your animal so you don't have to surrender it,' he said. 'That may be that we fund a vet bill for a couple of hundred dollars that they can't afford.' Mr Coleman also said weather also played a role in the amount of animal cruelty cases reported to the RSPCA. 'Typically, if we go back a few years before the economy started to crunch we got more complaints during the summer months,' he said. 'In summer months when feedstocks dry out we'll get more livestock-related complaints around drought-related issues as well.' The RSPCA NSW recently released a statement saying it was temporarily closing its online cruelty reporting portal. 'Like many organisations, we face significant challenges when supporting animals and their guardians, and while enforcing animal welfare laws with limited resources,' it said. 'Due to the high volume of cruelty complaints we are currently receiving, we have made the difficult decision to temporarily close our online cruelty reporting portal. 'This change will help us manage case intake more efficiently by ensuring that our team can effectively triage the animals who need us the most, through reducing lower-priority and duplicate reports. 'Animal cruelty reports can still be made, as they always have been, via our phone hotline, which remains operational and staffed.'

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