News (Proprietary)
The Age journalists shine at 70th Walkley Awards
3+ day, 10+ hour ago (580+ words) The Age's team behind the coverage of the trial of triple-murderer Erin Patterson has won the Walkley award for coverage of a major news event or issue after months of dedicated and insightful reporting. Journalists from The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald won six categories at the 70th Walkleys, journalism's annual national awards for excellence, in a ceremony on Thursday night at the ICC Sydney. The Herald's health editor Kate Aubusson, reporter Emily Kaine and Age investigative reporter Aisha Dow.Credit: Sydney Morning Herald Reporters Aisha Dow, Kate Aubusson and Emily Kaine won the Walkley for specialist and beat reporting for their relentless coverage of medical misogyny. Liam Mannix and William Davis were finalists in the same category for their detailed documentation of academic wrongdoing by a disgraced Australian scientist Mark Smyth. The groundbreaking visual story documenting the pursuit of…...
What percentage of Australians lives in Melbourne? Test yourself with The Age quiz
2+ week, 3+ day ago (87+ words) Test your knowledge of Melbourne and Victoria with Stephen Brook's quiz. Save articles for later Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. This plaque is in a park in inner-suburban Melbourne and was dedicated in 1988 to celebrate the area's history as an epicentre of pigeon racing. Where is it? Check next week's quiz for the answer. Last week's WHERE AM I? The Black Caviar statue is in Nagambie, in the Goulburn Valley region of Victoria....
What we know about Australia's teen social media ban – so far
1+ week, 5+ day ago (30+ words) Will my account disappear completely and the content be deleted? Or will I get it back when I turn 16? What happens if I am mistakenly identified as under 16?...
WA’s top public schools for 2025 revealed
1+ week, 6+ day ago (629+ words) Seven public schools from across Western Australia were named as the best in their field at the state's education awards at Crown Perth on Monday morning. Christopher Lambe, a level 3 science specialist at Grandis Primary School with more than 23 years' experience, was also handed the inaugural Teacher of the Year award. Lambe was one of four finalists who were chosen out of about 40 nominations. "I have a privilege of teaching kids to be curious and trying not to blow them up. It is the best job in the world, and I'll continue doing this until they kick me out," he joked. "I'm very overwhelmed [to win this award]. It's rare that teachers get this sort of treatment " to be put on this sort of a stage so it is an honour. "I am standing on the shoulders of so many…...
Remi lives 200m from a kindergarten. The council has sent her to one 6km away
1+ week, 5+ day ago (714+ words) A 10-minute walk from Linda Scott's home is a small community kindergarten where she had hoped to send her three-year-old daughter, Remi. But Scott's application for a place was denied by Glen Eira Council which, unlike some others in the area, does not give residents priority access to their local kindergarten. Linda Scott, with husband Liam Cooney and daughter Remi, wants the council to change the way it allocates kindergarten places so local families have priority.Credit: Simon Schluter Instead, Remi was assigned a place at a kindergarten in Elsternwick, six kilometres from her home in Bentleigh. Travelling to and from Elsternwick twice a day would mean an hour in the car for Scott, instead of walking around the corner to Bentleigh West Kindergarten. Scott is among a group of parents lobbying Glen Eira Council to add a proximity clause…...
Top Brisbane school wants playing fields – not units – at riverside site
1+ week, 3+ day ago (502+ words) Parents at Brisbane State High School have urged the state government to scrap plans to build residential towers on a prime parcel of inner-city land, calling instead for the former factory site in their catchment to be turned into playing fields. The government-owned land on the former Visy site " at one stage slated to become a broadcasting hub during the Olympics " went to tender for residential development in mid-October. But State High P&C president Chris Dutkowski said so many new homes being built in the catchment would strain enrolments at the partially selective school. Brisbane State High School is predicted to surpass 3800 students by 2029.Credit: Brisbane Times/Dan Peled Just over 2200 students live within State High's catchment, and 92 per cent attend the school, which is required to accept local students because of its state school status. It offers about…...
One-year blowouts hit Queensland school Olympics projects
4+ day, 3+ hour ago (638+ words) Queensland is yet to get shovels in the ground on Olympic infrastructure projects at state schools weeks before the priority projects were supposed to be completed. The Education Department instead said it expected to green-light construction in early 2026. The state government's Go for Gold school grant scheme awarded more than $93 million to 120 schools in its infrastructure funding round, with projects "to be completed by December 2025. Glenala State High School in Brisbane.Credit: Morgan Roberts In July last year, six schools secured the highest level of funding " category three " to cover projects ranging from $2.5 million to $5 million, including Glenala State High School in Brisbane's south-western suburbs. However, almost 18 months later at the state's original deadline for all projects' completion, none of the high-level funding projects had begun. A spokesperson from the Department of Education said all six schools would have projects…...
The north shore private school that has joined the $50,000 fees club
3+ week, 4+ day ago (784+ words) A north shore all-boys private school is set to raise fees above $50,000 next year, making it the third Sydney institution to break through that barrier as schools prepare to hike prices by 4 to 7 per cent. Shore School is among the first NSW private schools to release fees for 2026 " a month ahead of schedule " lifting prices just under 4 per cent as principals say rising teacher salaries, compliance and building costs are putting pressure on budgets. The school will lift year 11 fees to $50,630 next year, which includes the cost of tuition and levies for camps, technology and resources. Parents of year 12 students will pay $49,615 for tuition and levies, an increase of about 3.9 per cent. Shore School in North Sydney will lift its fees just under 4 per cent in 2026.Credit: Flavio Brancaleone In the past two years, fees at two eastern suburbs private…...
Private schools hike fees by thousands of dollars
3+ week, 5+ day ago (748+ words) Parents at some of Melbourne's top private schools will have to find thousands of dollars more for their children's education next year, as tuition fees at some institutions soar by more than twice the rate of inflation. One school, St Kevin's College, has increased year-12 tuition charges by 16 per cent for 2026, but even after the $5000 annual increase, the Toorak institution will remain considerably more affordable than most of its peer schools. St Kevin's has outpaced other nearby private schools in raising fees by 16 per cent. Credit: Jason South An analysis of the charges from the high-fee schools that have published their 2026 rates, shows their average fees increasing $2146, or nearly 5 per cent from this year, well above the headline inflation rate of 3.2 per cent. Geelong Grammar looks set to remain the state's most expensive school next year. Year 12 fees will push…...
‘Cut admissions in 2026’: The new rules shaking up university entry
1+ week, 4+ day ago (704+ words) Year 12 school leavers could face increased difficulty securing a spot at university from next year with at least one institution expected to cut admissions in response to a major funding overhaul. The government is moving to exert greater control over the allocation of places, giving each university its own "managed growth target" which is effectively a cap on domestic admissions from 2027. Analysts say that universities are poised to cut admissions due to the changes.Credit: Oscar Colman Analysts expect that universities which are significantly over-enrolled will cut admissions from as early as next year in a bid to bring enrolments down in preparation for the new policy. Education Minister Jason Clare said the new policy is moving to a managed system rather than a previous "Hunger Games" approach, with an extra 9500 Commonwealth supported places given to institutions next year. "More…...