2022 Election

Education Policy: Where Each Party Stands on Universities, TAFE and Schools

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Whether you realise it or not, Australia’s education system underpins much of the inequality that exists in this country. And with many Zee Feed readers enrolled in school, uni or training programs, the education policy promises made by politicians in the 2022 Federal Election could have a big impact on the next few years of your life! Here’s how the Labor, Liberal and Greens parties are proposing to tackle Australia’s education landscape.

We’ll keep updating the Education policy comparisons throughout the election campaign.

Last Updated: 18 April 2022.


Universities

LABOR

  • Plan to invest $481.7m under its Future Made in Australia Skills Plan, to deliver up to 20,000 new university places in 2022 and 2023
  • Says they will also prioritise universities offering more opportunities for under-represented groups including students from regional, remote and outer-suburban areas, those who are the first in their family to study at university, and First Nations Australians
  • Launch the Startup Year program, offering 2,000 Commonwealth supported places at accredited university accelerators for aspiring entrepreneurs

LIBERAL

GREENS

  • Plan to wipe out all existing student debt (HECS and otherwise) and ensure higher education is free going forward
  • 10% increase in funding for every Commonwealth Supported Place at uni
  • Investing almost $8 billion into research funding and grants
  • Set targets for secure, long-term jobs and reduce the amount of casual and contract jobs at universities by linking this to funding requirements
  • Paying for all of the above by implementing a Billionaire and corporate ‘super-profits’ tax

TAFE

LABOR

LIBERAL

GREENS

  • Making TAFE fee-free, as per the above plan for Universities
  • Eliminating government funding for vocational education or training providers that operate for private profit
  • Establish a new arts school

Schools

LABOR

  • $440m in a Schools Upgrade Fund. It will provide grants that schools can use to fund: air quality upgrades to allow classes to continue with COVID (e.g.: outdoor classrooms, air purifiers); additional psychologists and counsellors; or extracurricular like camps, excursions and sport

LIBERAL

  • Increase school funding by $8 billion by 2029. This includes doubling the per-student funding for private schools

GREENS

  • Make public schools “genuinely free” by covering costs of student resources and out-of-school-hours activities like sport and music
  • Prioritise public schools in the funding allocated for building and infrastructure, while increasing this to $400 million a year
  • Invest $68.5m to provide free pads and tampons in schools
  • $477m in funding to roll out Our Watch’s Respectful Relationships program in all public schools
  • Establish an artist in residence program for every school and library across Australia

No ‘gotcha’ moments, no reporting on redundant press conferences, no triggering opinion pieces – Zee Feed is covering the 2022 Federal Election in a way that’s better for your brain.

Visit the Election Hub to for straightforward content to help you cast an informed vote.

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