Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Film Victoria was created as "a new statutory authority to be responsible for Government activities related to the production and distribution of film in Victoria including film for educational purposes", under an Act of the Victorian Parliament introduced by Norman Lacy, Minister for the Arts, on 6 October 1981, known as the Film Victoria Act 1981.
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]
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 Victoria State Government enforces acts passed by the parliament through government departments, statutory authorities, and other public agencies. The government is formally presided over by the governor , who exercises executive authority granted by the state's constitution through the Executive Council, a body consisting of senior cabinet ...
Formerly known as the Department of Education and Early Childhood Development until January 2015 and Department of Education and Training (DET) until January 2023, [4] the department is responsible for the state's education system.
Victoria University Secondary College: Deer Park 7–12 Co-ed 2010 website: Victorian College of the Arts Secondary School: Southbank 7–12 Co-ed 1977 website: Victorian School of Languages P–12 Co-ed LOTE only, statewide enrolment 1935 website: Viewbank College: Viewbank 7–12 Co-ed 1994 website: Virtual School Victoria: Thornbury P–12 Co-ed
However, in both sectors Victoria compared favourably with national figures: the national teacher-student ratio in government schools was higher at 14.2, and 13.8 in the non-government sector. There was a rise in the number of teaching staff in Victoria, up from 68,697 in 2006 to 70,342 in 2007.
As such, the government business relating to the district were published in the New South Wales Government Gazette. This continued until 1851 with the passage of the Australian Colonies Government Act (1850), which formally separated the Port Phillip District from New South Wales to form the Colony of Victoria on the 2nd of July 1851. [2]