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ECU goes a step further to help aspiring teachers work in Australian classrooms

ECU is further steering the charge to help produce Australia’s teachers of tomorrow with the launch of the Future Teachers Fund. Thanks to public support, it will provide a $5,000 Scholarship per student, to those who are most in need of financial support during their final year professional experience placement.

Teacher sitting with her students reading a book The Future Teachers Fund has been established by ECU to help answer Australia’s desperate call for more qualified teachers in classrooms.
Caroline Mansfield stands with students The Future Teachers Fund has been established by ECU to help answer Australia’s desperate call for more qualified teachers in classrooms.

Recognised as Australia's leader in teacher education, Edith Cowan University (ECU) is further steering the charge to help produce Australia's teachers of tomorrow.

It's called the Future Teachers Fund (FTF):

  • A $5,000 dollar scholarship awarded to students most in need of financial help to get through their final year full-time professional experience placement.
  • Established by ECU to help answer Australia’s desperate call for more qualified teachers in classrooms by supporting future teachers to complete their degree.

"Out of 800 final year education students that graduate with Edith Cowan University each year, more than 220 report being negatively impacted by their financial circumstances in their final year of study (2021 National Student Experience Survey)," ECU School of Education Executive Dean Professor Caroline Mansfield said.

"We don't want the cost of living to be a barrier to becoming a teacher."

The Future Teachers Fund is made possible by the generous donations from the public, and from business.

'Prac' can be impractical

For many Australian university students in their final year of early childhood, primary and secondary teaching, it's the weeks of prac that pushes them to their limits financially.

Maintaining casual or part-time employment while spending the entire school week working in the classroom can be an impossible juggling act, like it was for international student Phillippa Combrink, who resorted to taking out a personal loan to get by.

Student Phillippa Combrink stands by the lake at ECU International student Phillippa Combrink worked three jobs a day to make enough money to get by.

"The financial implications were huge, I remember driving from Tapping to Two Rocks Primary School for prac every day, and there was a time my petrol light came on and I had no money to put petrol in my car at that stage," Phillippa recalled.

Phillippa Combrink came to Perth just prior to COVID lockdowns in 2020 to be nearer her sister, niece and nephew.

Under Australian law, like all international students, Phillippa is required to pay her tuition fees up front.

"I had to take on quite a lot of different jobs because as a casual worker you generally just do shifts of two to five hours, there were some days I was working three different jobs just to get in enough hours to make enough money to cover my expenses," she said.

"Having something like the Future Teachers Fund means for students we can take the focus off survival and actually engage with the experience."

Student Jack Lee standing at ECU campus smiling Mature age student Jack Lee turned his back on a successful career as a plumber to be a primary school teacher.

A small donation for a big sacrifice

After 16 years as a plumber and gas fitter, with a steady and secure income, it was a serious back injury that prompted mature-age student Jack Lee to chase his lifelong dream of becoming a school teacher.

It's meant huge sacrifices, and for his supportive long-term partner too.

"To do this degree, the biggest sacrifice has been financial. My partner and I have downsized the house, cutdown our spending, got rid of the fancy four-wheel-drive and we now live in a duplex," Jack said. "At the moment I am taking jobs wherever I can, hoping nothing goes wrong – like the car breaks down, a pet gets sick or receiving surprise bills."

Second-year teaching student Hannah Cullen said being awarded a Future Teachers Fund scholarship could be the difference between having to drop out or being able to graduate for so many struggling to juggle jobs and study.

"Having that financial assistance would be incredibly helpful, not having to spend so much time working," Hannah said.

"At the moment to do this it's about 40 hours of study a week, plus 20 hours of work, you can't find the time to have a life."

Student Hannah Lee standing outside classroom at ECU Joondalup Second year student Hannah Cullen said any financial assistance would be incredibly helpful.

Tomorrow's teachers

Executive Dean of the School of Education Professor Caroline Mansfield said it is not just the world-class education that puts ECU at the top of the list for aspiring teachers in Australia, it’s also the outstanding amount of academic, social and financial support that is on offer.

But Professor Mansfield wants to acknowledge, the University cannot do it alone.

While ECU is in constant discussions with the State and Federal Governments, it is the donations from the public and WA business that could decide the future of many of tomorrow’s teachers.

"Every donation will truly make a difference for our future teachers and will be a big step forward in answering the call for more qualified teachers needed in classrooms," Professor Mansfield said.

You can support the Future Teachers Fund by heading to the website to make a donation.


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