View Full Version : Is the AFL becoming a private school comp? And does it matter?
Dry Rot
16-11-2021, 11:44 PM
An interesting article about the young players feeding the AFL and NRL. Article claims that the AFL is the increasing numbers of players coming into the national competition off scholarships at private schools.
Does it matter?
Schools of thought: How pathways are leading footy codes in different directions
Roy MastersNovember 16, 2021 — 7.45pm
As NRL clubs consider the players they will recruit for 2022 and AFL clubs assess their options at the national draft held at the end of this month, it is timely to note the considerable difference between the two codes on the schools from which their players are drawn.
The biggest problem of the AFL, according to Aussie rules luminaries I spoke to recently, is the increasing numbers of players coming into the national competition off scholarships at private schools.
If that is the AFL’s biggest problem, then it is one the NRL would like to have, given the perception that rugby league’s major challenge is the bad behaviour of its players.
Some would argue that the AFL’s biggest problem is the solution to the NRL’s enduring headache. That is, if future NRL players were educated in private schools, they would emerge as better-behaved citizens.
Well, that’s an elitist view and one which denigrates the dedicated work of teachers and coaches in the NSW and Queensland state education systems.
And it’s not as if private schools transform their future AFL players into saints, judging by the St Kevins College, Melbourne old boy who publicly burnt his school blazer in protest at the alleged behaviour of Collingwood player Jordan De Goey.
De Goey, who attended the same Toorak school, was charged with assault late last month in New York. He will vigorously defend the charge and Collingwood have stood him down. Admittedly, the behaviour he is accused of doesn’t seem as heinous as the rampage by NRL player, Matthew Lodge, six years earlier in the same city.
But the Melbourne media did not pursue De Goey as relentlessly as the Sydney media demanded the NRL take action against Lodge. It’s a further example of what some see as a reason for the perceived difference in the alleged behaviour of players in the rival codes – not simply education but the difference in reporting by the respective media.
Still, the contrasting school background of the players in the two codes is interesting. In 2019, according to a report in The Age, the Victorian government schools system accounted for 55 per cent of Year 12 enrolments but produced only 30 per cent of AFL players. Catholic schools had 24 per cent of final school year enrolments and 31 per cent of AFL players, while the wealthy independent schools comprised 21 per cent of enrolments but 39 per cent of AFL players.
The difference is largely explained by the increasing number of talented footballers awarded scholarships at the end of primary school or Year 10 and tenable to elite private schools.
The consequent decline in competitiveness of the Victorian government school system as a producer of AFL players is the problem identified by my Aussie rules sources.
However, while the AFL concedes this may be a problem in 20 years, it insists the code remains equally accessible for all. “Talented players get to play in the Victorian NAB League, which is the major pathway to the AFL,” a spokesman said. “Overall, it is a higher standard of football than any of the respective schools competitions and accessible to anyone under 19, even those who have left school.”
The pathways to the NRL are diverse, including the increasing numbers of Pasifika players who were educated overseas. No statistics are kept on the school background of NRL players but a study of the players selected for the NSW State of Origin team the past two years shows a relatively even division between those from non-government schools and government ones.
The government schools are also equally divided between those from the NSW sports high schools (Endeavour, Matraville, The Hills, Illawarra) and standard comprehensive high schools. Most of the products of non government schools are from the Catholic system, while only two players attended elite private schools – Cameron Murray (Newington) and Angus Crichton (Kings).
Sydney’s private schools have long been the bastion of rugby union, but AFL posts are sprouting up on their campuses like triffids, suggesting they may become a future source of elite players, as they are in Melbourne. However, the Victorian government system does not have NSW’s spread of sports high schools, which means low-income parents can send their athletic progeny to the free state system, rather than rely on a scholarship to a high fee-paying private school.
Comparing the grand final teams in both codes, the Western Bulldogs – perceived as a working-class club – had more graduates of private schools than Melbourne – an establishment club. The NRL’s grand final teams, not surprisingly, had minimal private school products, while players from schools like Dorrigo, Rooty Hill and Nowra show that the government comprehensive schools are still producing talent.
Daughter of the West
16-11-2021, 11:51 PM
I remember reading something similar a couple of years ago, I think the article at the time focussed on Carey.
Both Essendon Keilor College and Maribyrnong College have AFL programs - have they produced any footballers of note in recent times?
bornadog
17-11-2021, 09:19 AM
In the grand final, we had more players that attended Private Schools than Melbourne did.
It is a shame that Government schools don't have proper programmes to nurture Aussie Rules kids.
I have a lot of thoughts on this.
I'm not sure I'm up to the emotion writing those thoughts would cause me but it goes a little like this:
- The AFL clubs are quite literally scared of anything that doesn't 'shine'.
- The various talent programs across all footy states are much the same - and make some quite ridiculous allowances for private school students (allowances that are simply NOT provided to their public school brethren).
- The coverage of private school footy - in all states - far exceeds the standard of the competitions and the old-boys network promote kids coming through from their school rather than from their junior club or state-league/NAB league club.
- The schools take little to no responsibility for preparing their players for the season. The state-league/NAB League clubs do all the work running pre-season programs...then in late March the season starts and the schools swoop in and take the players...fine - I guess...but is there any wonder that those participating in those programs (up to 12 from each school) enjoy dominant seasons playing vs teams where half the players dont have the same fitness base?
- The media are in league with the private schools and REPEATEDLY promote the private school that players come from. They quite literally never mention players from public schools or - shock horror, anyone who might have left early to pursue a trade (unless they want to poke fun at Jack Higgins for electing not to finish year 12).
Dry Rot
17-11-2021, 10:40 PM
mjp,
Interesting post.
Should a wily club take a contrarian approach and really focus on talented public school lads who are otherwise being overlooked?
Mofra
18-11-2021, 08:53 AM
That kid who left school early to work 10-12 hours a day as a forkie did ok in the AFL system.
Dustin Martin
It's like some kids who are 'self starters' and should be marked higher by recruiters are marked more harshly.
I do note that we have benefited from FS picks more than most clubs and our players do tend to send a lot of their kids to St Kevins.
Plus the APS scholarship scheme for notable talented kids like Marra and Cyril Rioli as boarders bumps up the private school numbers too.
jeemak
18-11-2021, 09:34 AM
mjp,
Interesting post.
Should a wily club take a contrarian approach and really focus on talented public school lads who are otherwise being overlooked?
I'm not sure what it's like now, but when I was a lad the standard of public school football was really poor and the games/ scheduling severely lacked organisation.
It's the Sunday footy comps where these kids might get to shine to hopefully get onto a NAB league list.
bornadog
18-11-2021, 10:33 AM
I'm not sure what it's like now, but when I was a lad the standard of public school football was really poor and the games/ scheduling severely lacked organisation.
It's the Sunday footy comps where these kids might get to shine to hopefully get onto a NAB league list.
I don't know if it is still true, but many years ago, Gov schools stopped Sport as a compulsory activity, which I think was wrong.
Private Schools still have sport as something everyone must play.
Back when I went to school,we had a proper competition between schools in a district playing all sorts of sports including Football. Although I went to a pretty crappy school, we did produce a couple of AFL footballers.
jeemak
18-11-2021, 10:56 AM
There were footy and cricket, softball and netball teams to join etc. but it wasn't compulsory (I finished late nineties). There was also running/ cross country and athletics etc. based on who performed well at school athletics days. For each you would go onto district, regional, and then state level competitions.
State schools are too fragmented and it would be very costly to run a well organised competition.
The Underdog
18-11-2021, 04:01 PM
Channel 7 commentators can barely call a game without mentioning which private school everybody went to. Drives me *!*!*!*!ing insane.
Is because more talented footballers are getting more scholarships nowadays?
Grantysghost
18-11-2021, 05:29 PM
Is because more talented footballers are getting more scholarships nowadays?
I think it's changed.
Two guys I went to school with made it. They were adults at 15 though.
Tyson Lane, Shane Ellen.
It's rare to see guys come from that type of school now.
I knew Tyson personally growing up, he was a man at 15 like seriously shaving etc.
Also; an arrogant bastard but I stood under a pack one day and watched him climb over it and take the greatest mark I've ever seen.
I kicked 3 in the first qtr (didn't get drafted wasn't shaving until 25).
Edit : Darren Stanley.
I was friends with his brother Shaun who was the best player I'd seen probably.
boydogs
18-11-2021, 05:50 PM
I think it's changed.
Two guys I went to school with made it. They were adults at 15 though.
Tyson Lane, Shane Ellen.
It's rare to see guys come from that type of school now.
I knew Tyson personally growing up, he was a man at 15 like seriously shaving etc.
Also; an arrogant bastard but I stood under a pack one day and watched him climb over it and take the greatest mark I've ever seen.
I kicked 3 in the first qtr (didn't get drafted wasn't shaving until 25).
Edit : Darren Stanley.
I was friends with his brother Shaun who was the best player I'd seen probably.
Worked with Tyson in Cairns post career, didn't see that side of him, might have been white line fever or he just grew out of it
Grantysghost
18-11-2021, 06:18 PM
Worked with Tyson in Cairns post career, didn't see that side of him, might have been white line fever or he just grew out of it
This was 15 ish, so yeah probably grew out of it. When you're a man at 15 hard not to walk around like the king.
He was certainly proud of himself.
Twodogs
18-11-2021, 06:19 PM
I remember reading something similar a couple of years ago, I think the article at the time focussed on Carey.
Both Essendon Keilor College and Maribyrnong College have AFL programs - have they produced any footballers of note in recent times?
Touk Miller went to Maribyrnong.
As a matter of interest Maribyrnong is an anglicised version of an Aboriginal term 'Mirring-gnay-bir-nong', which translates as 'I can hear a ringtail possum' There are certainly plenty of possums around here at the moment.
Twodogs
18-11-2021, 06:27 PM
That kid who left school early to work 10-12 hours a day as a forkie did ok in the AFL system.
Dustin Martin
It's like some kids who are 'self starters' and should be marked higher by recruiters are marked more harshly.
I do note that we have benefited from FS picks more than most clubs and our players do tend to send a lot of their kids to St Kevins.
Plus the APS scholarship scheme for notable talented kids like Marra and Cyril Rioli as boarders bumps up the private school numbers too.
I wouldn't have let my kids anywhere near St Kevin's. When I was younger I knew heaps of Kevies old boys and they weren't exactly shining examples of their school.
EasternWest
18-11-2021, 08:20 PM
I wouldn't have let my kids anywhere near St Kevin's. When I was younger I knew heaps of Kevies old boys and they weren't exactly shining examples of their school.
Didn't Jordan de Goey go to St Kevin's?
Twodogs
18-11-2021, 09:14 PM
Didn't Jordan de Goey go to St Kevin's?
I believe so.
https://www.pedestrian.tv/news/melbourne-st-kevins-burning-blazer/
If you've ever seen the film Dogs In Space, most of the guys in the band it's based on met at St Kevins.
jeemak
18-11-2021, 10:39 PM
This was 15 ish, so yeah probably grew out of it. When you're a man at 15 hard not to walk around like the king.
He was certainly proud of himself.
Yeah and senior footy certainly sorted him out. A girl I knew dated him for a while, at least in his early twenties he was reportedly still not grown out of it but glad to hear form boydogs he seemed to.
jeemak
18-11-2021, 10:40 PM
St Kevins was known as Toorak Tech for a long time for a good reason.
EasternWest
18-11-2021, 10:54 PM
I believe so.
I'll set em up, you knock em down.
Coincidentally that's Jordan and his mates pick up routine too.
bornadog
18-11-2021, 10:59 PM
I wouldn't have let my kids anywhere near St Kevin's. When I was younger I knew heaps of Kevies old boys and they weren't exactly shining examples of their school.
Libba and Wallis went to St Kevs
Twodogs
18-11-2021, 11:53 PM
I'll set em up, you knock em down.
Coincidentally that's Jordan and his mates pick up routine too.
I had to explain to my mum what a wingman was the other night. Some mentioned it on the telly.
"Well mum, you know how girls usually go out in pairs?"
It's not the "SCHOOL" as such that is the reason why private school students are prioritised. It's what it represents about the player and their background.
1/. They have some family support available. Even if that support is primarily financial, you wouldn't find too many private school kids doing a 'Sydney Stack' and sleeping on whatever couch he could beg or borrow for the night whilst playing u18 footy (be it colts or NAB league the principle is the same.
2/. They are WELL experienced in doing stuff "ON TIME". To me, this is one of the great problems with the demise of the AFL Academy programs (apart from a personal loss of income and free travel!) - kids who weren't used to 'doing much' had to learn (quickly) to act as a collective, get to a meeting/meal/session on time and in uniform. I know this will be sneezed at by many but it is a massive issue with players entering into 'talent pathway footy' who are straight out of (for example) Hoppers Crossing Y10's. Just learning how to 'get along' is a big (BIG) problem - and footy clubs have higher expectations and lower tolerance levels that public high schools...mainly because footy clubs can simply say "SEE YA" whereas the Public High School needs to work through a P&D process (sorry, punishment and discipline - you know, parent meetings, detention, suspension etc) and EVEN THEN probably still needs to allow them to continue to be enrolled...
3/. A clear understanding of hierarchy and an ability to respect it. I guess this is part of the previous point but a kid from a private school would never do what one recent draftee did and arrange to meet a club at his house...only to decide that he probably didn't want to play there anyway so just decided not to be there and turned his phone off...I mean, NEVER might be too strong a word but it is also probably an accurate one...and again, this isn't reflective of the 'school' as such - and 99% of public school kids wouldn't do this either - but it is more a general comment on the general 'picture' - private school represents family support, an ability to follow the rules and an understanding that 'work' has to be done...versus the picture that public schools represent broken families, kids who are ill-disciplined in terms of work/play and lack basic time management/self management skills.
Do I think any of this is true? Maybe. Sometimes. I don't know. But the recruiters CLEARLY do emphasise it. You would have to ask them why they behave this way. Clearly based on the public/private school mix in the NRL (the second most popular football sport in Australia and the dominant code in both Sydney and Brisbane) there is more than enough athletic potential in the public school system...but there is the perception that potential has more baggage attached.
SquirrelGrip
26-11-2021, 10:05 AM
And so our top 3 picks all attended elite private schools:
Darce - Scotch
King Arthur - Wesley WA
“Lucky Phil” Cleary - Haileybury
Jeanette54
29-11-2021, 03:20 PM
Footy isn't the only sport with a private/state school divide. Cricket is another, although the reasons may be a little different, but then maybe not.
Almost every test batsman (I refuse to say batter) in living memory came from a private school. Three reasons, better coaching, more influential contacts (the old boy network) and turf wickets (ie. sporting facilities). You probably have to go back to Jeff Thompson and Lenny Pascoe to find state school cricketers at the highest level.
Twodogs
29-11-2021, 07:11 PM
Footy isn't the only sport with a private/state school divide. Cricket is another, although the reasons may be a little different, but then maybe not.
Almost every test batsman (I refuse to say batter) in living memory came from a private school. Three reasons, better coaching, more influential contacts (the old boy network) and turf wickets (ie. sporting facilities). You probably have to go back to Jeff Thompson and Lenny Pascoe to find state school cricketers at the highest level.
Colin Miller and Merv Hughes both went to state schools. I think that Tony Dodemaide went to Chisholm college in Braybrook.
jeemak
29-11-2021, 07:25 PM
David Warner isn't from a private school, Ricky Ponting left high school after year ten and went to work at a private school as a grounds maintenance staffer.
Twodogs
30-11-2021, 12:59 PM
David Warner isn't from a private school, Ricky Ponting left high school after year ten and went to work at a private school as a grounds maintenance staffer.
In 1902 the Prince of Wales was being introduced to Australian fast bowler Ernie Jones and found out he was from Adelaide. The prince said "Ah, Adelaide. Tell me did you go to Prince Alfred college?" "Yes, your majesty." said Ernie "I drive the shit cart through it twice a week"
bornadog
03-12-2021, 02:01 PM
Melbourne public school hits draft home run (https://www.afl.com.au/news/690060/melbourne-public-school-hits-draft-home-run-bombers-great-proud)
The college in Melbourne's south-east that's proving you don't have to be at a private school to get drafted
full story in link
Dry Rot
03-12-2021, 09:52 PM
You probably have to go back to Jeff Thompson and Lenny Pascoe to find state school cricketers at the highest level.
Or even Sydney grade cricket.
What happened when you played against Thommo and Pascoe for Bankstown?
Jeff Thomson relives the day he terrorised Mosman in grade game
https://www.sportingnews.com/au/cricket/news/jeff-thomson-relives-the-day-he-terrorised-mosman-in-grade-game/9zmnmqdmso201bf90j387r886
jeemak
03-12-2021, 11:08 PM
Melbourne public school hits draft home run (https://www.afl.com.au/news/690060/melbourne-public-school-hits-draft-home-run-bombers-great-proud)
The college in Melbourne's south-east that's proving you don't have to be at a private school to get drafted
full story in link
Generally speaking I think there needs to be more space for public schools that offer creative, sporting and craft types (to name but a few different types of kids, but you get my drift) things geared towards their interests rather than the low variation and almost cookie cutter education in the public school system. The way things are currently done too many kids fall through the cracks and are at the mercy of the economy of the day (or five year cycle) to determine whether they have any prospects or otherwise should they choose to leave school early. And I'm not saying it should be a free for all do whatever approach at these specialised public schools, more so, just something to keep kids in the system longer so they can mature and experience what they want to experience and don't go into an unstructured abyss.
I guess this is what technical colleges of the day used to attempt to do, though a lot about learning and cognitive development has been discovered since they were phased out. It seems pretty silly that we try and address the consequences of cookie cutter education downstream when a few tweaks upstream whilst requiring investment would change the future for a lot of kids (and the public purse) for the better.
Anyway, enough from me on how the education system should work. I guess the point of what's happening in Rowville is great for getting kids drafted, but it's pretty much just a reflection of what kids in private schools get plus a little more, so nothing revolutionary/ game changing.
But thanks for posting BAD, and getting me out of the thoughtless posting cycle I've been stuck in for a few weeks (some may say longer) since I purchased a puppy and have been getting smashed at work.
Axe Man
22-08-2024, 10:45 AM
What will this mean for the AFL talent pathway?
Major shift as APS faces biggest shake-up in the 116-year history of the sporting program (https://www.heraldsun.com.au/victoria-education/major-shift-as-aps-faces-biggest-shakeup-in-the-116year-history-of-the-sporting-program/news-story/3ce166bb66231bf9870d5ba576d56de5)
Victoria?s most elite schools are facing backlash over what?s been described as ?the dumbing down of APS sport? amid a landmark review.
Victoria?s most elite schools are moving away from year-round competitive sports like football and rowing in favour of walking, yoga and pilates amid a landmark review, the Herald Sun can reveal.
One school source called it ?the dumbing down of APS sport due to a growing aversion to competition in private school ATAR factories?.
A review into the future of the Associated Public Schools (APS) sporting program is underway ? the biggest shake-up in the 116-year history of the sporting program.
The Herald Sun can reveal APS schools will continue compulsory Saturday morning sport for senior school students, but with a renewed focus on less competitive, contact team sports.
A growing number of enrolments from Asian and Indian families is understood to be a factor in the move.
?Schools now have parents who are less into outdoor sports compared to basketball and badminton which requires less commitment and is played indoors? the source from an APS school said.
The review is also expected to lead to students only doing one compulsory sport a year, not two or three at schools such as Melbourne Grammar, Scotch College, Haileybury College, Xavier College and Caulfield Grammar.
Changes to the sporting program at 11 of Victoria?s most prestigious schools will have major ramifications for the AFL draft, which heavily relies on top talent from APS schools.
It?s understood that Haileybury College is steering the direction of the outcome of the review.
The school has moved to a ?sports-plus model which focuses on recreational sports such as karate, walking and pilates?, one Haileybury insider said.
Carey Grammar has already gone down a similar path of offering fitness clubs and yoga and Caulfield Grammar no longer requires senior students to year-round sports.
The Haileybury source said staff at such schools were ?less and less interested in Saturday sport and more in maintaining academic results?.
Many private schools are already moving away from requiring teachers to hold extensive sporting roles, with recent alumni paid $36 an hour or more to coach and supervise players.
Institutions such as the Head of the River rowing regatta, which has been going for more than 150 years could also be affected by the new direction, as schools continue to rationalise their competitive sporting programs into the future.
Schools with large rowing programs such as Carey Grammar spend more than one million dollars a year.
Melbourne Grammar principal Philip Grutzner told the Herald Sun the logistics of ?providing a meaningful sporting experience for approximately 24,600 students on a weekly basis across three seasons are significant?.
?We see the main challenges as continuing to respond to the enrolment growth in some APS schools, maintaining access to high quality coaches, grounds and facilities, and transport logistics and time?.
He said students had given ?largely positive student feedback? and ?love playing sport with their friends?.
One alumni representative from an APS school said former students ?want the prestige and heritage of sport to continue?.
?But people understand the huge logistic challenges, so some schools may still keep first football but not ten teams at year eight,? they said.
The source said any move to amalgamate with the Associated Grammar Schools of Victoria competition, which includes Trinity Grammar, Penleigh and Essendon Grammar and Ivanhoe Grammar, would be resisted as ?infiltration by the second tier?.
No timeline has been set for the review, which is being informed by external sporting consultants Colganbauer, to be completed.
FrediKanoute
22-08-2024, 08:27 PM
The school has moved to a ?sports-plus model which focuses on recreational sports such as karate, walking and pilates?, one Haileybury insider said
As someone who took up Pilates in my 40's I wouldn't call it a sport. I'll call it a strength training activity (same with walking). Sport requires competition.
My son is about to go to a Grammer School in the UK (which are Govt funded selective schools - you pass an entrance exam to get in) which is dominated by kids from an Asian/Indian background. Whilst academics at the school is important they all boys are required to play rugby in the autumn, football (soccer) in the Winter and cricket in the Summer. Most boys have never picked up a rugby ball in their life - still they are expected to play - why? It teaches them to get out of their comfortzone!
jeemak
22-08-2024, 08:42 PM
What happened to Melbourne High a couple of decades ago is now happening to the private schools. Such is the way of the world I guess.
There's also an element of what you pay for or how far your dollar goes at play. Just like any service, private schools will opt for the lowest cost model to optimise profits for as long as mugs are prepared to pay and not demand more. Strong academic results are a must, extra-curricular activities are a sundry requirement and families will still pay whatever they need to in order to buy the former.
Happy Days
22-08-2024, 08:45 PM
What happened to Melbourne High a couple of decades ago is now happening to the private schools. Such is the way of the world I guess.
There's also an element of what you pay for or how far your dollar goes at play. Just like any service, private schools will opt for the lowest cost model to optimise profits for as long as mugs are prepared to pay and not demand more. Strong academic results are a must, extra-curricular activities are a sundry requirement and families will still pay whatever they need to in order to buy the former.
Not kidding about Melbourne High. I know more about water polo than any person should ever have to know.
jeemak
22-08-2024, 08:46 PM
Not kidding about Melbourne High. I know more about water polo than any person should ever have to know.
Some strange folks in the water polo set.
I used to hit that pool after two hours sleep on a Sunday morning for recovery.
Axe Man
23-08-2024, 09:12 AM
What happened to Melbourne High a couple of decades ago is now happening to the private schools. Such is the way of the world I guess.
There's also an element of what you pay for or how far your dollar goes at play. Just like any service, private schools will opt for the lowest cost model to optimise profits for as long as mugs are prepared to pay and not demand more. Strong academic results are a must, extra-curricular activities are a sundry requirement and families will still pay whatever they need to in order to buy the former.
I know next to nothing about the private school system but surely they are all not for profit? I assume any surpluses they generate are reinvested into facilities, etc?
bornadog
23-08-2024, 09:23 AM
I know next to nothing about the private school system but surely they are all not for profit? I assume any surpluses they generate are reinvested into facilities, etc?
Correct
jeemak
23-08-2024, 10:10 AM
Poorly worded on my part.
I know next to nothing about the private school system but surely they are all not for profit? I assume any surpluses they generate are reinvested into facilities, etc?
Right. Of course...
hujsh
23-08-2024, 01:34 PM
As someone who took up Pilates in my 40's I wouldn't call it a sport. I'll call it a strength training activity (same with walking). Sport requires competition.
My son is about to go to a Grammer School in the UK (which are Govt funded selective schools - you pass an entrance exam to get in) which is dominated by kids from an Asian/Indian background. Whilst academics at the school is important they all boys are required to play rugby in the autumn, football (soccer) in the Winter and cricket in the Summer. Most boys have never picked up a rugby ball in their life - still they are expected to play - why? It teaches them to get out of their comfortzone!
Don't buy that. It's to get them to do 'English' stuff/ 'what we've always done'. I'd be truly shocked if they ever get the English kids to do Asian/Indian stuff for a quarter of the year in order to get them out of their comfortzone.
jeemak
23-08-2024, 01:49 PM
Don't buy that. It's to get them to do 'English' stuff/ 'what we've always done'. I'd be truly shocked if they ever get the English kids to do Asian/Indian stuff for a quarter of the year in order to get them out of their comfortzone.
I reckon they'd do a fair bit of mathematics and computing, that stuff's pretty difficult.*
*Yeah I know......dangerous stereotypes and all that.
Axe Man
23-08-2024, 01:51 PM
Right. Of course...
I clearly said I've got no idea how the private school system works, I was looking for insight with the original article I shared and my follow up question. If you have anything worthwhile to share if would be appreciated.
hujsh
23-08-2024, 01:57 PM
I reckon they'd do a fair bit of mathematics and computing, that stuff's pretty difficult.*
*Yeah I know......dangerous stereotypes and all that.
haha, I'd love if they tried to play that off as equivalent.
'An Englishman takes to Rugby like a Pakistani takes to doing my IT work'
bornadog
23-08-2024, 02:21 PM
I clearly said I've got no idea how the private school system works, I was looking for insight with the original article I shared and my follow up question. If you have anything worthwhile to share if would be appreciated.
I sent my daughter to a private girls school from Prep and have no regrets at all. I only have one child and must admit sometimes I struggled to pay the fees after starting my own business. IMHO, she had a fantastic education compared to the Government school that I attended and lacked facilities - couldn't even afford our own library.
The facilities, the resources etc are incredible and no they are not there as a profit making enterprise. Most of the private schools in Melbourne are associated with religious groups but, they don't push that down your throat and they are not expected to make a profit, but they try to break even at minimum so they don't call on the Church to top up and any surplus goes back into the school facilities.
With sport, they offer so many opportunities to play whatever suits you or interest you have - her school offered 30 different sports. I know the school she went to started playing Aussie rules after she left and they have a very good team.
Yes, they get Gov funding, and maybe too much, but that is a whole different discussion not suitable for WOOF.
I clearly said I've got no idea how the private school system works, I was looking for insight with the original article I shared and my follow up question. If you have anything worthwhile to share if would be appreciated.
Why so touchy?
The debate about whether fees are/aren't appropriate and whether the level of government funding is/isn't appropriate is pretty nuanced. Yes - private schools and colleges are 'not for profit'. But that is not the same as saying they don't MAKE a profit. Which is not to say that the profits aren't re-invested into the school. Which is also not to say that schools need palaces for gymnasiums, permanent holiday camp locations (multiple) etc etc.
Ultimately not every school is suitable for every kid - of that there is no doubt. I am not here to criticise people for whatever decisions they make for THEIR KIDS education - after all, they are THEIR KIDS - but I do wonder what the actual purpose of spending $50k per year on school fees is when their is little tangible difference with what each child walks away with...
I'm concerned about many things in the world around me and the number of privately run pre-primary, primary and secondary education centres that continue to pop up - and the advertising being done by each of them to attract students - has me wondering what EXACTLY they mean by not for profit and what purpose each of these institutions is serving.
Like BAD said, this is probably not a debate for WOOF but I'm always up for a chat...
Axe Man
23-08-2024, 03:55 PM
Why so touchy?
The debate about whether fees are/aren't appropriate and whether the level of government funding is/isn't appropriate is pretty nuanced. Yes - private schools and colleges are 'not for profit'. But that is not the same as saying they don't MAKE a profit. Which is not to say that the profits aren't re-invested into the school. Which is also not to say that schools need palaces for gymnasiums, permanent holiday camp locations (multiple) etc etc.
Ultimately not every school is suitable for every kid - of that there is no doubt. I am not here to criticise people for whatever decisions they make for THEIR KIDS education - after all, they are THEIR KIDS - but I do wonder what the actual purpose of spending $50k per year on school fees is when their is little tangible difference with what each child walks away with...
I'm concerned about many things in the world around me and the number of privately run pre-primary, primary and secondary education centres that continue to pop up - and the advertising being done by each of them to attract students - has me wondering what EXACTLY they mean by not for profit and what purpose each of these institutions is serving.
Like BAD said, this is probably not a debate for WOOF but I'm always up for a chat...
Because your 3 word answer to my query came across as rather vague and pointless like I had said something stupid. You probably didn't intend it that way.
Thanks for the info and I understand all of that but I think we have got away from what I was originally asking with that article. Do you think if the APS schools move away from football it will have any affect on the talent coming through or will it make no difference as the talent league teams will keep doing what they are doing?
soupman
24-08-2024, 08:02 AM
If I'm interpreting it correctly, they aren't banning these sports they are just pushing less kids in that sports direction.
Presumably that means a smaller pool of kids playing, which reduces the talent coming through the system, but I imagine the amount of kids that have to be pushed into playing that end up being potentially AFL standard is a severe minority, and the kids that do end up making it are mostly inclined to play it still anyway.
Because your 3 word answer to my query came across as rather vague and pointless like I had said something stupid. You probably didn't intend it that way.
Thanks for the info and I understand all of that but I think we have got away from what I was originally asking with that article. Do you think if the APS schools move away from football it will have any affect on the talent coming through or will it make no difference as the talent league teams will keep doing what they are doing?
Not really, no. Because the talent for the AFL comes from the so called "First 18" and not from the kids who have a preference for Yoga over playing footy.
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