A report has found that in 2023 children in out-of-home care were being expelled at five times the rate of other children and only a quarter were progressing from year 10 to year 12. The Commission for Children and Young People made 47 recommendations to address the issue, but it says the Victorian government has not implemented any of them. The Victorian government says it accepts in full, part or principle the majority of the recommendations and is taking a staged approach to progressing responses.
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00:00It's been five years since Jackie completed her VCE.
00:06The art room is pretty much the same as what you would remember.
00:10But she very nearly didn't get there.
00:13Life was chaotic. I was moving back and forth from different kinds of care from the age
00:18of two, so not a lot of stability.
00:20Abuse, neglect and family violence disrupted her home life and her education. She changed
00:27primary schools frequently. Sometimes she didn't make it to school at all.
00:32I would often just be taken and placed somewhere else and my friends at school wouldn't know
00:37I'd kind of just disappear.
00:39At any given time, around 9,000 Victorian children are in out-of-home care. Only a quarter
00:46of them progress from year 10 to year 12, compared to more than 80% of students in the
00:52general population. In 2022, only 12 students living in residential care were enrolled
00:59in year 12, and none of them completed VCE.
01:03They're being punished for behaviours connected to trauma. They're being met with low expectations.
01:08They're being met with stigma. It really is, from my point of view as Children's Commissioner,
01:15pretty appalling and shameful state of affairs.
01:17In late 2023, the Commission tabled a major report in the Victorian Parliament, detailing
01:24the dire educational outcomes for children in care. It made 47 recommendations, from
01:29improved training to financial support. The State Government has so far failed to implement
01:35any.
01:38The Victorian Government says it's taking a staged approach to the Commission's recommendations.
01:43I really do think this is an area that needs significant action and urgent action, and
01:50to date I have not seen that urgency.
01:53Jackie's final school offered her the flexibility she needed to get over the line, allowing
01:58her to complete year 12 over three years. She recently qualified to be a nurse. Her
02:05former principal says there's no reason other kids in care can't also succeed.
02:10It's really important for schools, school leaders and our system to support the idea
02:16that all schools should be working in the space of supporting kids in out of home care.
02:20Jackie's looking forward to a more secure future.
02:24Stable income, stable housing, not having to move around. That'd be nice.
02:32Walking a different path.
02:40For more UN videos visit www.un.org