Access keys | Skip to content | Skip to footer |
Problems viewing this site
*
Home > Smart State Strategy > Smart State Strategy 2005-2015

Smart Queensland Smart State Strategy 2005–2015

New world – new learning: education to equip people with the knowledge, skills and abilities necessary to succeed in an innovative society

‘Formal education will become integrated from the very early Primary years, through Secondary and Post-Secondary education and the scientific method will be a core feature of all education, to provide for problem-solving, stimulation of curiosity and creativity, balanced decision-making and involved citizenship.’ (Submission to Queensland’s future – building on the Smart State from Dr Joseph Baker, Chief Scientific Advisor, Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries)

The world is changing rapidly: our work and daily life require skills not even imagined just a few decades ago. This rate of change is likely to continue in coming decades. In an innovative society, people will have several changes of career; they will no longer be exclusively tied to a single employer or industry. They will enjoy the benefits of new skills and capabilities through education. They will be avid life-long learners, returning to education – formal and informal – for their entire life.

In 2001, an Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) survey concluded that ‘high levels of education and literacy are the key principal components demanded in the knowledge economy.’1

Our investment in education is therefore wide-reaching. Queensland’s education system is being rebuilt from the ground up, across the early, middle and senior phases of learning as part of the Government’s Education and Training Reforms for the Future initiative that started in 2002. With the achievement of each milestone, our education and training system is being reshaped to cater for students’ individual needs, provide more diverse and flexible learning pathways, inspire academic achievement, and equip students for the world of work. Smart Queensland will build upon the gains made by Education and Training Reforms for the Future.

Our children will continue to receive a firm grounding in the basics of reading, writing and mathematics, starting in the new Preparatory Year. They will also be equipped with new skills for the information age. We will continue to update school syllabuses so that our students can succeed in an ever-changing world. We will upgrade information and communication technology in schools. Our students will not only learn the practical skills to use the new technologies, but they will also develop the conceptual skills to manage the vast, ever-expanding stores of information made available through these technologies. Our best students will be encouraged to become leaders in their chosen fields. Our dedicated teachers will be supported in rising to this challenge.

We also need to raise the profile of enterprise education. In a world where many traditional jobs are disappearing, we need to encourage all people, but particularly young people, to see themselves as future entrepreneurs and wealth creators. Networks between industry and the education system must be developed so that our education system responds to the requirements of an ever-changing business world.

The Queensland Government will introduce a Smarter Learning framework, develop Smart Classrooms, and establish Smart Academies:

Skilling Up with Industry

Vocational educational students at Gladstone State High School are in high demand by local industry thanks to the skills they learn in and outside the classroom. Since 2004, senior students have had the option of undertaking English, maths and science subjects for half their school week, and spending the remaining two days skilling up for their future. One day a week is devoted to a two-year TAFE pre-vocational program; the second day sees students gaining hands-on work experience with a local employer. Students achieve certificate-level standard in trades such as plumbing and mechanics, with many students snapped up by local employers and given the opportunity to pursue a full-time apprenticeship.

Fast Tracking to University

Senior students at Cavendish Road State High School’s Brisbane Academy of Science are fast tracking their way to university. The high-achieving students have the opportunity to undertake tertiary-level science subjects, taught at school by academy teachers, during their final three or four semesters of high school. Students who successfully complete two subjects in the fields of biotechnology, biomechanics, physics, chemistry or biology, and satisfy all other admission requirements, can gain direct entry into a science degree at Griffith University or a human movement degree at the Queensland University of Technology, after they complete Year 12. They also gain valuable credit points exempting them from subjects already completed.

2003


Smart Schools Renewal Program is an $80 million program over four years for new and upgraded school facilities to improve curriculum delivery and ICT integration

2004


Twenty-five accelerated mathematics and science teacher training scholarships for graduates who will commence work as maths/science teachers in 2006

2004


Science on Saturday is a state-wide program to show 7-14 year old children that science can be fun and exciting and lead to many career opportunities

2005
Smart Schools Subsidy Scheme – 52 Queensland state schools will share in $5 million in State Government subsidies to build more than $10 million worth of new facilities in 2005-2006