Staff Reporters
22 April 2025, 8:56 PM
A new numeracy guarantee that will focus on upskilling teachers and providing resources for parents will be introduced across South Australia in a bid to lift maths results.
The guarantee, which follows South Australia’s introduction of a numeracy check for Year 1s in 2026, is part of improvement reforms that make up part of the recently signed Gonski agreement.
The state government has committed to increase public school funding by more than $300 million and the federal Government will raise its public schools funding from 20 per cent to 25 per cent of the Schooling Resource Standard (SRS).
This Bilateral Agreement means more money, more resources and more support will be provided to public schools over the next decade to ensure every child, in every school, has a fair go.
As part of the agreement, there are key improvement measures that will be focused on, in order to lift results and ensure supports for students are targeted.
A major change to South Australia will be the introduction of the numeracy guarantee.
South Australia led the charge with ensuring maths improvements were included in the agreement – following its numeracy check trial – and is the first state in the country to have a literacy and numeracy check for Year 1 students.
The numeracy guarantee will include:
The numeracy guarantee means all public school students having access to a world-leading maths curriculum, with teachers better trained in teaching mathematics, and parents having the tools they need to best support their child with mathematics.
The additional funding is also tied to other reforms that will include:
Minister for Education, Training and Skills Blair Boyer says this agreement is not just for the current generation of public school students, but the next generation and the one after that.
“As a state, we identified early on that maths results were declining so we implemented the numeracy check to help with early intervention supports. I am pleased to see this Gonski agreement will also focus on numeracy for students right across the country, as we led the charge in this field.
“This commitment will allow us to focus on what we need to do to improve educational outcomes, including how we can better attract and retain our teaching workforce.
“Funding for our schools, and the education for our young people is critical – we cannot simply coast along with the bare minimum – and I’m proud that we now have an agreement in place to ensure that the supports are exactly where our students need them.”