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Home » Social Policy

Where is the love: are our public institutions failing our young people?

Adam Smith | Wheeler Centre
MP4
Where is the love: are our public institutions failing our young people?
01 March 2013 | Once upon a time, older generations could berate young people for not realising their relative good fortune. But these days, it seems that opportunities for young people are dwindling … along with government funds for education and employment.

There’s been a huge shift in the last decade or so in the way ‘middle Australia’ views public schools – and a corresponding drop in public school enrolment in this band. We’ve also witnessed substantial university fee hikes, a radically stripped-back TAFE sector, and the eradication of technical schools.

Our public libraries and health services, meanwhile, seem to be showering an embarrassment of riches on pre-schoolers, but flounder in the delivery of programmes of substance targeting teenagers and young adults.

And job prospects for those leaving our educational institutions and entering the world of work are increasingly limited.

Have we lost sight of what our young people need – and what they can contribute to society? And can we reinvigorate our public institutions to better educate, support and care for those who will, before long, play a central role in shaping our future?

 

Publisher Type
Non government organisation
Coverage
Australia
Copyright
Wheeler Centre
Permanent URL
http://apo.org.au/node/33053
Views
370

Topics

  • Social Policy
    • Youth

Keywords

Institutions
Children

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