Socio-economics are at the centre of it.
This, 1000x over.
This furthers Mr Study's point - I would say to that that the 'good public schools' and the 'private schools' have one thing in common, and that is a supportive school culture.
It goes much deeper than simply a supportive environment at school. There are problems that can’t be solved by throwing money at them or changing school culture.
The school i did my VCE at was a VCE only school, solely year 11s and 12s. Every single teacher was a VCE teacher and had a full idea of what an ATAR was, how its calculated, which courses people, should do, etc. Many schools have a "VCE Coordinator" but as you can see, our school had little need for one, with every teacher filling this role.
It was one of the larger catholic schools in the state. The government threw
tonnes and tonnes of money at it.
Back when K.Rudd was prime minister and Julia Gillard was education minister, we got one of those "trade training centres" the government promised. We now have a bakery, a picture-framing workshop, a full stage with all the sound production equipment, a restaurant and im sure there's more i'm leaving out. Huge chunks of our teachers are VCE examiners and a few contributed to textbooks.
The median study score of our school is
exactly the same as the public school down the road. This school had a kid
burn down one of the buildings and a kids parents + brothers come with baseball bats to attack another student because of a disagreement. It's pretty ghetto (although we had our fair share of events like this too).
Granted, the fees were very low, there are exemptions and most people take them, the school only ends up charging 2-4k MAX.
The point im trying to make is that its not necessarily how good the school is, its the backgrounds of the students. Many students there, like myself, had no family members go to uni. My parents didn't even finish high-school or complete their HSC (older style VCE). Many people had horrible family environments. A minority (not tiny by any means though) of people were rather bad off, living hand to mouth. In this thread i've seen a lot of talk about the
middle class but not once have i seen someone mention
the working class or whatever else is below the middle class. It's almost like it doesn't exist in some peoples minds.
Obviously, without much money, you can't hire hoards of tutors, unlike kids in wealthier areas or from wealthier families (regardless of the kind of school you go to). A lot of schools have wonderful, mind broadening extra-curricular activities and much better sports. I think a lot of the time people from these schools might not even consciously think about the fact that other schools lack a choir program, classical ensemble or have boating along with 19 other kinds of sport.
No way you're getting this at any regular old public school. Let alone one in a poor area where students have no chance to do many of these things outside of school. Going to Rome and Athens every summer is definitely off the books too. Regardless of the school, you miss out on so many other enrichment programs rich kids can get.
Until my family’s move to the foothills of Mount Buffalo, I’d been a student since kindergarten at a parochial private girls’ school in Geelong. At this school, crotchety but effective schoolmarms coddled their barbarian, middle-class charges in small, calm, girl-filled classrooms, an environment privileged by the school’s bourgeois values and the entitled bullishness of its parents.
I’d been introduced to literature, to Greek and Roman history, to chemistry in its science labs, and to new languages; I’d acted the best male parts in its pompous little theatre productions, become good at tennis in its sports ‘academies’, and taken up the piano with gusto. My spare time was spent in its brand spanking new library, my dirty little shoes up on its soft furnishings, consuming whatever the librarians, plural, had produced that week for me to peruse. I had, in short, thrived on the nauseating principle that, as a product of patrician entitlement and its money, I would be handed countless openings into bookishness, into learning and experimenting and knowing and doing, and feeling as though I was achieving something. I was a confident and outspoken child, often deliriously happy, who felt purposeful. I had adored the school’s focused, industrious, high-functioning atmosphere. - http://www.themonthly.com.au/public-versus-private-schools-across-great-divide-catherine-ford-4835
Monash sets targets to have a certain % of their students from disadvantaged backgrounds. I think it was something like 30%. A few years ago, i read a report where they said despite their best efforts, scholarships and SEAS, they still failed to even hit this number.
Something is quite clearly wrong with the system.