Giao diện
TeguNews
Thế giới

The union is no longer acting for us teachers. I’m part of the 58 per cent who voted No

As a teacher in a public secondary school, with a daughter in a public primary school, the strength of the No vote was not a surprise at all.

Sydney Morning Herald4 phút đọc

The union is no longer acting for us teachers. I’m part of the 58 per cent who voted No

June 19, 2026 — 11:09am You have reached your maximum number of saved items. Remove items from your saved list to add more. This morning, the Australian Education Union’s leadership was blindsided by the rejection of the in-principle agreement they struck with the Allan government.

As a teacher in a public secondary school, with a daughter in a public primary school, the strength of the No vote was not a surprise at all. The offer simply does not address the low pay and crushing workload that are driving teachers out of the profession, and undermining the high-quality education Victorian students need and deserve. We were told the pay rise would make us the best paid teachers in Australia – despite leaving us well behind our colleagues in Western Australia.

Even the more limited claim that we would catch up to NSW was fudged; all but two classifications would remain thousands of dollars behind, year after year. In real terms, the offer would barely bring us back to our 2021 salaries by 2030. Education support staff, the unsung heroes of our education system, were presented with a false pay rise, with much of the claimed increase in a lump sum allowance rather than a real salary improvement.

Even that allowance was overstated, with union leaders not mentioning it would be partially offset by removing an existing allowance. The workload measures were also exaggerated. For instance, we were offered an increase to four professional practice days to focus on marking and planning.

While welcome, this would just restore the four PPDs we used to have – but in the new version, rather than teachers being covered by a relief teacher, these would be additional pupil free days, pushing the cost onto students and their families. Teachers and school staff are at breaking point. We have huge issues with burnout.

An offer that did not seriously address these issues was doomed to fail. But where do we go from here? School staff want this dispute resolved swiftly, and so do their students.

So what needs to happen to get negotiations back on track? First, the AEU leadership needs to recommit to internal democracy. They had simply no idea what members were thinking, and they need to change their approach quickly so they can represent us properly.

In previous industrial campaigns, we have held mass meetings of members, or of delegates representing every school in the state, to debate priorities and campaign plans, and to allow the union leadership to accurately gauge what members want and need. This time, opportunities for discussion and debate were shut down. Our regular regional meetings were cancelled and replaced with briefings, with no opportunity for members to debate priorities or vote on next steps.

The union’s social media accounts were vigorously policed to remove dissenting comments, and dozens of members, including elected school delegates, were blocked. Key decisions, such as suspending planned industrial action or accepting an in-principle agreement, are made by an elected branch council – but the union doesn’t publish a list of who these councillors are, or how they can be contacted by the members they represent. The electorate boundaries are secret, and councillors have complained that even they don’t know which schools are in the areas they represent.

Of course, members need to take responsibility for this, too. Participation in union elections is notoriously poor. Many councillors are elected unopposed, and the turnout for the executive elections is abysmal.

The Victorian branch secretary was elected in 2024 with less than 8000 votes – but the union has more than 50,000 Victorian members. Is it any wonder that the union is out of touch with the views of the broader membership? This culture needs to be fixed as an urgent priority.

Second, we need to send a clear message to the state government that AEU members are serious about fixing the crisis in public education, and we won’t settle for a deal that does not make meaningful progress towards that goal. Shamefully, the so-called Education State remains the only state or territory without a timeline for full funding of public schools. As it stands, Victorian students are only funded to about 90 per cent of the Schooling Resource Standard, because the Allan government cut $2.

4 billion from the education budget over the coming years. But last week, at The Age’s Education Summit, Education Minister Ben Carroll confirmed that an agreement with the Commonwealth for full funding is currently being finalised, and he expects the deal to be done around the same time as the schools EBA. That’s excellent news!

But we want to know the true state of the education budget before, not after, we sign an agreement. Full funding for public schools will have the biggest impact if it is directed towards addressing the workload concerns of teachers and support staff, ending the burnout and attrition that leads to staff shortages, and giving us the time for planning and feedback that s

Đọc thêm từ Thế giới

종합특검, ‘통일교 도박 수사 무마’ 의혹 윤희근 전 청장 23일 소환
Thế giới

종합특검, ‘통일교 도박 수사 무마’ 의혹 윤희근 전 청장 23일 소환

본문사회사회일반종합특검, ‘통일교 도박 수사 무마’ 의혹 윤희근 전 청장 23일 소환박지영기자수정 2026-06-19 11:23펼침기사를 읽어드립니다Your browser does not support theaudio element.0:00윤희근 전 경찰청장이 2023년 12월28일 특별 승진 임용식이 진행된 청주 청원경찰서에 들어서고 있다. 연합뉴스광고3대 특검 잔여 사건을 수사하는 권창영 특별검사팀이 통일교 원정도박 수사 무마 의혹과 관련해 윤희근 전 경찰청장을 피의자 신분으로 오는 23일 소

The Hankyoreh
‘정신 승리’ 트럼프 “내 권력 한계 없다…세계 경제 공황 막고자 합의”
Thế giới

‘정신 승리’ 트럼프 “내 권력 한계 없다…세계 경제 공황 막고자 합의”

본문국제미국·중남미‘정신 승리’ 트럼프 “내 권력 한계 없다…세계 경제 공황 막고자 합의”정유경기자수정 2026-06-19 11:18펼침기사를 읽어드립니다Your browser does not support theaudio element.0:00이란 종전 MOU 체결 뒤 인터뷰도널드 트럼프 미국 대통령이 액시오스 기자와 인터뷰를 하고 있다.

The Hankyoreh
BTS 해외 팬들, 부산 거쳐 뷔·슈가 고향 대구도 찾았다
Thế giới

BTS 해외 팬들, 부산 거쳐 뷔·슈가 고향 대구도 찾았다

본문전국영남BTS 해외 팬들, 부산 거쳐 뷔·슈가 고향 대구도 찾았다김규현기자수정 2026-06-19 11:18펼침기사를 읽어드립니다Your browser does not support theaudio element.0:00지난 주말(12∼13일) 부산에서 열린 그룹 방탄소년단(BTS) 콘서트에 찾은 글로벌 팬들이 대구 대성초등학교 앞 ‘뷔 벽화거리’를 찾아 사진을 찍고 있다. 대구시 제공광고지난 12∼13일 부산에서 열린 그룹 방탄소년단(BTS) 콘서트를 찾은 해외 팬들이 대구까지 찾았다.

The Hankyoreh