Department of Education (New South Wales)

New South Wales Department of Education
NSW Department of Education Logo
Government Department overview
Formed 1880
Preceding agencies
  • New South Wales Department of Education and Communities
  • New South Wales Department of Education and Training
Jurisdiction New South Wales
Headquarters 105 Phillip Street, Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia
Ministers responsible
Government Department executive
Key document
Website https://education.nsw.gov.au

The New South Wales Department of Education, a department of the Government of New South Wales, is responsible for the delivery and co-ordination of early childhood, primary school, secondary school, adult, migrant and higher education in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Prior to 1 July 2015 vocational education via Technical and Further Education (TAFE) colleges were administered by the department, with the Department of Industry, Skills and Regional Development assuming responsibility from this date.

The department's powers are principally drawn from the Education Act, 1990 (NSW).[1]

Structure

The head of the department is its secretary, presently Mark Scott. The department reports to the Minister for Education, currently Rob Stokes; supported by the Minister for Early Childhood Education, the Minister for Aboriginal Affairs and the Assistant Minister for Education, currently Sarah Mitchell. Ultimately the ministers are responsible to the Parliament of New South Wales.

With a budget of more than A$8 billion, over 2,240 schools with a total enrolments of almost 1 million students, Department represents roughly one-quarter of the State's total budget each year.

Departmental leadership

Name Title Term start Term end Time in office
William Wills Secretary of the Board of National Education 12 February 1849 October 1863
William Wilkins October 1863 December 1866
Secretary of the Council of Education January 1867 30 April 1880
Under-Secretary of the Department of Public Instruction 1 May 1880 12 November 1884 4 years, 195 days
Edwin Johnson 13 November 1884 10 April 1894 9 years, 148 days
John Maynard 10 April 1894 1 October 1903 9 years, 174 days
Frederick Bridges (acting) 1 October 1903 7 February 1905 1 year, 129 days
Peter Board Director of Education 8 February 1905 31 December 1922 17 years, 326 days
Stephen Smith 1 January 1923 1 August 1930 7 years, 212 days
G. Ross Thomas 2 August 1930 21 September 1940 10 years, 50 days
John McKenzie 22 September 1940 29 November 1952 12 years, 68 days
Sir Harold Wyndham Director-General of Education 1 December 1952 31 December 1968 16 years, 30 days
David Verco 1 January 1969 3 July 1972 3 years, 184 days
John Buggie 4 July 1972 18 February 1977 4 years, 229 days
Douglas Swan 21 February 1977 8 July 1985 8 years, 137 days
Robert Winder 10 July 1985 29 April 1988 2 years, 294 days
Fenton Sharpe Director-General of School Education 30 April 1988 12 November 1991 3 years, 196 days
Dr Ken Boston Director-General of Education and Training
Managing Director of TAFE NSW
2 January 1992 12 July 2002 10 years, 191 days
Jan McLelland 22 October 2002 22 January 2004 1 year, 92 days
Andrew Cappie-Wood 22 January 2004 14 April 2007 3 years, 82 days
Michael Coutts-Trotter 14 April 2007 28 March 2011 3 years, 348 days
Dr Michele Bruniges 7 September 2011 February 2014
Director-General of Education and Communities
Managing Director of TAFE NSW
February 2014 July 2015
Secretary of the Department of Education July 2015 1 April 2016
Peter Riordan (acting) 4 April 2016 August 2016
Mark Scott September 2016 incumbent 2 years, 41 days

History

In 1957 a committee was appointed to survey secondary education in New South Wales to survey and report on the provision of full-time education for adolescents. The resulting report was known as the Wyndham Report.[2]

in 1974, the Australian Capital Territory Schools Authority took over responsibility for nearly 60 government schools that were previously under the control of New South Wales.[3]

See also

References

  1. "NSW Education Act 1990". Parliament of New South Wales. 1990. Retrieved 6 May 2007.
  2. Wyndham, Harold Stanley (1957). "Report of the Committee Appointed to Survey Secondary Education in New South Wales". Parliamentary paper (New South Wales. Parliament); 1957/49.
  3. "Since World War II History of New South Wales government schools". Education NSW. Retrieved 2018-06-12.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.