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Aboriginal School Based Traineeships
This program has five objectives:
  • Help more young Aboriginal students get jobs.
  • Encourage more Aboriginal students to stay at school during Year 11 and 12.
  • Make a wide range of vocational training available to Aboriginal students.
  • Make education and training more meaningful for Aboriginal students.
  • Develop a program where Government Departments work together in a coordinated way.
If you enter the program and successfuly complete it you will obtain a Western Australia Certificate of Education (WACE), a VET qualification, and you will receive wages while you are employed as a trainee.

The Aboriginal School Based Traineeship program involves:
  • You, the student
  • Your school
  • TAFE (or another Registered Training Organisation)
  • A Group Training Organisation (GTO)
  • The host employer
  • You will also fill out forms with the Australian Apprenticeships Centre (AAC).
Up until December 2005, over 2,000 students have commenced an Aboriginal School Based Traineeship. Please ask a teacher at your school who will put you in contact with your school's Vocational Education and Training (VET) Coordinator. The VET Coordinator can help you through the process.
 

Traineeships

Aboriginal TraineeshipsThis program has five objectives:
  • Help more young Aboriginal students get jobs.
  • Encourage more Aboriginal students to stay at school during Year 11 and 12.
  • Make a wide range of vocational training available to Aboriginal students.
  • Make education and training more meaningful for Aboriginal students.
  • Develop a program where Government Departments work together in a coordinated way. Read More

Single Gender

Single Gender ProjectThe trial which commenced in 2006 aims to:
  • provide an evidence base to inform the Department in relation to the conditions that support improved student learning in single gender classes;
  • explore school-level issues relating to single gender classes as an educational option for students; and
  • contribute to advice to the Minister for Education and Training for possible future policy development in relation to single gender classes. Read More

Family Links

Family Links
The Family Links Program supports schools to work collaboratively with parents, caregivers and the school community. This is an important program initiated by the Government to:
  • establish projects to improve partnerships with parents/caregivers
  • encourage involvement of community groups in the formation and strengthening of local school/community partnerships
  • encourage involvement of extended family members in the school community. Read More

Voc Ed

Vocational Education & TrainingImplementation of VET is in accordance with the nationally agreed principles from Principles and Guidelines for Improving Outcomes for Vocational and Technical Education and Training in Schools (2005 - 2008). Vocational Education and Training (VET) in Schools programs are delivered as part of a broad, general education that combines study towards a senior secondary certificate (i.e. the Western Australian Certificate of Education - the WACE) with a nationally recognised VET qualification within the Australian Qualification Framework. Read More

Literacy & Numeracy

Through the Commonwealth Literacy and Numeracy Program (CLNP), the Department directs supplementary literacy and numeracy funding to schools with a high proportion of educationally disadvantaged students. The aim of this program is to measurably improve literacy and numeracy among disadvantaged students and to support the National Literacy and Numeracy Plan.
 


Dare To Lead


Yule Brook College Wins:
High Achievement Award


The 2007 Dare to Lead Excellence in Leadership in Indigenous Education Awards were announced by the Hon. Julia Gillard, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Education, at a ceremony in Parliament House, Canberra on 14 March 2008.

YBC showed "...significant improvements in school enrolments and graduation rates plus a reduction in suspension rates over the past five years. There is evidence that both the student and community voice within the school is strong."