
Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations
Minister for School Education, Early Childhood and Youth  Peter Garrett, Chris Evans
National education budget (2009)
Budget  $44,489 million (4.63% of GDP) – 80th ranking of government expenditure on education worldwide.
General details
Primary languages  English
System type  Federal
Established compulsory education  1830s
1870sLiteracy (2003)
Total  99%
Male  9
9%
Female  99%
Enrollment (2008)
Total  20.4% of population
Primary  1.9 millionSecondary  1.4 million
Post secondary  1 million Attainment (2008)
Secondary diploma  75% Post-secondary diploma  34%[citation needed]
Education in Australia is primarily the responsibility of the states and territories. Each state or territory government provides funding and regulates the public and private schools within its governing area. The federal government helps fund the public universities, but is not involved in setting curriculum. Generally, education in Australia follows the three-tier model which includes primary education (primary schools), followed by secondary education (secondary schools/high schools) and tertiary education (universities and/or TAFE colleges).
The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2006 evaluation ranked the Australian education system as sixth for reading, eighth for science and thirteenth for mathematics, on a worldwide scale including 56 countries. The PISA 2010 evaluation ranked the Australian education system as sixth for reading, seventh for science and ninth for mathematics, an improvement relative to the 2006 rankings.
The Education Index, published with the UN's Human Development Index in 2008, based on data from 2006, lists Australia as 0.993, amongst the highest in the world, tied for first with Denmark and Finland.Education in Australia is compulsory between the ages of five and fifteen to seventeen, depending on the state or territory, and date of birth. Post-compulsory education is regulated within the Australian Qualifications Framework, a unified system of national qualifications in schools, vocational education and training (TAFE) and the higher education sector (university).
The academic year in Australia varies between states and institutions, but generally runs from late January/early February until mid-December for primary and secondary schools, with slight variations in the inter-term holidays and TAFE colleges, and from late February until mid-November for universities with seasonal holidays and breaks for each educational institute.
 
 
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