Innovating the SACE | Drivers - evidence for change | UPDATE FOR MAY 2
Drivers for change
Our world today is fast-paced and globally connected. The learning journey can’t be a race with a finishing line anymore.
Young people are learning throughout their lives. Transferring what they know and can do across subjects, beyond school and in different environments to prepare for a future they will define and lead.
To be equipped to tackle the challenge of a changing world, every young person will need to build life-long skills, capabilities, knowledge and understanding.
The Passport to Thrive will support connecting learning pathways to work, networks and friendships. Driving their future, with a sense of self and wellbeing.
School is their stepping stone for continuous growth. The SACE is their passport to thrive.
Key research and policy directions from around the work support the need to recognise in students, a broader and deeper range of skills and capabilities.
We know paths to further learning and work are becoming more flexible, yet still we define success at the end of schooling by a narrow measure that excludes more young people than it celebrates.
Learning Beyond Limits: Insights and learnings from visionary schools and communities working toward a fit-for-purpose learning system. A study commissioned by Learning Creates Australia, December 2023
Our vision is for a world class education system that encourages and supports every student to be the very best they can be, no matter where they live or what kind of learning challenges they may face.
The Alice Springs (Mparntwe) Education Declaration, Education Services Australia (Council of Australian Governments Education Council), December 2019.
Young people will need a broad base of skills, values and knowledge to become successful lifelong learners. Our senior secondary schooling system must continue to adapt to fulfil this modern role.
Looking to the Future: Report of the Review of senior secondary pathways into work, further education and training, Education Services Australia (Council of Australian Governments Education Council), Professor Peter Shergold AC (Review Panel Chair), June 2020.
How can we prepare students for jobs that have not yet been created, to tackle societal challenges that we can’t yet imagine, and to use technologies that have not yet been invented? How can we equip them to thrive in an interconnected world where they need to understand and appreciate different perspectives and world views, interact respectfully with others, and take responsible action towards sustainability and collective well-being?
The future of education and skills Education 2030, OECD Future of Education and Skills 2030 Informal Working Group
The new right drivers, by contrast, capture and propel the human spirit.
The right drivers for whole system success, Michael Fullan, Centre for Strategic Education, 2021
The Review recommendations are based on a 2018 view of what senior secondary rigour needs to look like for this generation of students and a new approach to teaching and learning that develops both deep discipline knowledge and relevant capabilities.
SACE Stage 2 review [PDF 172KB], September 2018.
Schools, educators, systems have been valiantly trying to move in the right direction. But as long as the markers of success reinforce old standards, the degree of change will continue to be limited and efforts counterproductive.
Beyond ATAR – A proposal for change, Australian Learning Lecture Position Paper on transforming the transition from school to higher education, life and work, Megan O’Connell, Sandra Milligan and Tom Bentley, September 2019.
SATAC appreciates that senior secondary qualifications like the SACE have important currency for young people and that the ATAR dominates as the main metric of student success. Our ambition is that the capabilities assessment data will provide additional metrics to guide different conversations about student achievement and success.
Stuart Mosman, Chief Executive, SATAC (SA Tertiary Admissions Centre), September 2022.
Only 30 per cent of first-year students are offered a university place based on their ATAR, the rest gain entry based on a range of alternatives such as principals’ recommendations, portfolios and being mature age.
Learner profiles prove that ATAR is not everything, Julie Hare, Education editor, Australian Financial Review, July 2021
Students need to leave school with a comprehensive snapshot of their abilities and capabilities, not just a mark to define their future.
What a Jobs Summit ‘win’ would look like, Jennifer Westacott, Chief Executive of the Business Council of Australia, published in The Australian Financial Review, August 2022.
The common themes emerging in these official reports and expert opinions and in the views of young people, is that schooling in Australia does not reliably deliver or recognise what young people need if they are to thrive and contribute to a healthy economy and society.
Recognition of learning success for all, Sandra Milligan, Rebekah Luo, Toshiko Kamei, Suzanne Rice and Thida Kheang for Learning Creates Australia, 2020.