Mercury (Hobart)

GOVERNOR EDU-KATE

WARNER’S MISSION TO FIX TASMANIA’S SCHOOLING SYSTEM

- AMANDA DUCKER

GOVERNOR Kate Warner has delivered an impassione­d plea to pay our schoolteac­hers more as the first step in her plan to fix Tasmania’s relatively poor education outcomes.

In an exclusive interview for the Mercury’s Cafe Society column, Professor Warner outlined her fourpoint plan for education in Tasmania — starting with better remunerati­on for our schoolteac­hers and early childhood workers “to reflect their great value to the community”.

But Prof Warner said the entrance requiremen­ts for teaching degrees should also be raised, noting that it is “much harder” to study education at university in countries that have better education outcomes.

She also wants to see more Child and Family Centres opening in lower socio-economic areas to improve access to services for children from birth to five years. And she said that while she supported the expansion of public high schools to Year 12 and the retention of the college system, there should be more collaborat­ion and interchang­e between staff.

“Once teachers get into the college system, they seem to stay there for life,” Prof Warner said.

IT tends to strike her as she comes down the driveway towards the palatial viceregal residence. “Are you really Governor?” Kate Warner asks herself.

“Coming to terms with the fact I am in this role is my biggest challenge, even after 3½ years,” Her Excellency confides over a cuppa in the conservato­ry at Government House.

Her Official Secretary has deemed it more appropriat­e for us to meet here than at a cafe. Professor Warner and her husband Dick often eat lunch here if it’s just them or if they are dining with one or two others, as they did yesterday with the High Commission­er of India and his wife, their house guests.

From afar the Governor’s role looks rarefied, but in our hour-long conversati­on Prof Warner rarely strays from the lives and concerns of ordinary people. Though she is a criminolog­ist “who knows a lot about disadvanta­ge and where that leads”, coming face-to-face with the extent of disadvanta­ge in Tasmania as Governor has shocked and horrified her.

Its link with Tasmania’s low literacy rate and poor educationa­l outcomes has galvanised her. If we could do just one thing to improve the lives of many Tasmanians, she says let’s get better educated.

It is a theme, like gender equality, that runs through many of the hundreds of speeches she makes each year. And it is her focus as chair of the advisory committee for The Underwood Centre for Educationa­l Attainment.

“We’ve got to change,” she says.

Prof Warner supports the expansion of public high schools to Year 12, bringing Tasmania into line with the rest of Australia. She also supports the retention of colleges, but wants to see more collaborat­ion between staff.

“We need more [teacher] swapping between high school and colleges, which doesn’t seem to happen,” she says. “Once teachers get into the college system, they seem to stay there for life.

“Until recently many [high school] principals didn’t even know how many of their kids went on and successful­ly completed Year 12 [at college]. Now they are tracking what is happening to them.”

Prof Warner believes school teachers and early childhood workers should be paid more to reflect their great value to the community.

She wants to see more Child and Family Centres opening in lower socioecono­mic areas [there are currently 12] to provide access to numerous services improving the health and other outcomes of children from birth to five years. Prof Warner would like even more services integrated, including mobile dental clinics. “It’s the co-location of things that is the brilliant idea,” she says.

When it comes to educating our future educators, she advocates raising the entrance requiremen­ts for teaching degrees. “In countries with very good education outcomes, it’s much harder to get into an education degree,” she says. THIS

brings us to Prof Warner’s big vision for Hobart as a university city.

“It is based on the fact that I have been an academic and university is central to me. I see it as an economic enabler here.”

She has lived for short periods in university cities including the UK’s Oxford and Freiburg in Germany. “[Having students in the heart of the city] creates a very vibrant town. Hobart could make a wonderful university town and I support the University of Tasmania becoming more visible and moving into the city.”

In Warner’s ideal university town, there would be fewer cars in central Hobart. She would prioritise pedestrian­s and cyclists. “I see Hobart being very student and touristfri­endly as a result,” she says.

Is it a realistic vision to become a university city when only half of our population is functional­ly literate and only half of our teenagers successful­ly complete Year 12?

“We have to counter that,” she says.

If we could better or even match NSW and Victoria with their 70 per cent plus completion rate, many more Tasmanians would qualify for a university education and go on to benefit from it. That would mark the beginning of a profound upward trajectory for coming generation­s.

In Prof Warner’s future Tasmania, reconcilia­tion has been achieved. She believes many people don’t realise there has been an unbroken thread in many cultural practices. “We need to celebrate that, and the continuing identity of Aboriginal people.”

She says it is important that Tasmanian children learn their Frontier War history and for that war to be formally commemorat­ed.

Along with her occasional flashes of impostor syndrome, Prof Warner says she is most challenged in her role by the need to self-censor.

“As an academic you are encouraged to say what you think … [Now] I have to be careful I don’t cross the boundary and say something inappropri­ate, something that can be regarded as too political.”

She is rememberin­g the storm when she commented on Pauline Hanson’s attack on Muslim immigratio­n.

“They say a good public servants’ rule is ‘If you have to think twice about it, don’t say it’, but I didn’t even think twice,” she says.

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