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Williamstown School State Library of Victoria, Melbourne's largest public library.(La Trobe Reading Room – 5th floor view)Education in Victoria, Australia is supervised by the Department of Education and Training, which is part of the State Government and whose role is to "provide policy and planning advice for the delivery of education". [1]
The Department of Education is a government ... The department has responsibility for the following policy ... Victorian Certificate of Education; Victorian ...
The Victorian Curriculum F–10 incorporates and reflects much of the Australian Curriculum F–10, but differs in some important respects, most notably the representation of the curriculum as a continuum of learning and the structural design. Victorian Government and Catholic schools are required to use the Victorian Curriculum F–10.
Teaching in Victoria, Australia is regulated by the Victorian Institute of Teaching, through the Department of Education and Training (DET), which is part of the State Government. The DEECD is biggest operator of schools in the state, and along with the independent and Catholic school systems have an interest in teaching as the operator of ...
The Victorian School Building Authority (VSBA) is a division of the Victorian Department of Education which is responsible for the construction of new government schools and infrastructure improvements of existing schools. [2] It was established by the Andrews Government as part of the 2016 Victorian Budget. [3]
In Victoria, the public sector is defined by the Public Administration Act 2004. The Victorian public service is composed of ten departments , the head of each being a secretary . Each department can consist of a number of portfolios, each of which is the direct responsibility of a minister , who collectively form the ministry .
The VEYLDF was released in 2009 by the Department of Education and Training (Victoria) having been adapted from the Early Years Learning Framework (EYLF) for Australia, and implemented during 2010. [2] A key difference between the two frameworks include how EYLF focuses on children from birth to five years of age, while VEYLDF extends to eight ...
Grattan Institute currently focuses on six key policy areas: Budgets and Government, Disability, Energy and Climate Change, Health, Education, and Economic Policy. [3] Its programs are chosen with the belief that research into these areas, in line with principles of evidence-based policy can make a demonstrable difference to Australia’s ...