PLATO WA, an abbreviation of 'People Lobbying Against Teaching Outcomes', was a lobby group led by Marko Vojkovic that was at the forefront of an ultimately successful campaign of parents and teachers against the implementation of Outcomes Based Education in Western Australia. After launching, the PLATO WA website quickly became one of the most widely read educational websites in Australia with more 180,000 hits per month and contained an archive of more than 10,000 articles on the subject of OBE implementation. The role of PLATO in leading public opinion against OBE was acknowledged in many academic papers on the subject.[1]

People Lobbying Against Teaching Outcomes
AbbreviationPLATO
Formation14 June 2004
Dissolved26 April 2009 (dormant)
TypeCommunity lobby group
Location
Key people
Marko Vojkovic, Steve Kessell
Websiteplatowa.com (defunct)

Background edit

Outcomes Based Education was an education philosophy that influenced national and state educational policies from the early 1990s.[2] Western Australia’s experience commenced with the development of the 1999 Curriculum Framework which became mandatory for all schools in the state.

PLATO was formed on 14 June 2004 by high school science teacher Marko Vojkovic[3] in response to the increased efforts of the state government to implement an Outcomes Based Education system in schools. In May 2006 retired Professor Steve Kessell stated that the teachers who opposed OBE where not a handful of troublemakers, but the overwhelming majority.[4] On 14 June 2006 they were involved in an anti-OBE rally at Parliament House.

The push to introduce outcomes based assessment in place of conventional examinations led to significant community opposition, supported by The West Australian, and became a major political issue for the Carpenter ministry.[5]

Education Minister Ljiljanna Ravlich was a particular target of PLATO. Following her demotion in 2006, Western Australia's OBE curriculum was subjected to parliamentary inquiry. In 2008 it was officially abandoned by the state government with Minister for Education Mark McGowan remarking that the 1990s fad "to dispense with syllabus" was over.[6] That same year PLATO supported the approach of the proposed Australian National Curriculum.[7]

PLATO WA inspired a similar lobby group in Queensland called PLATO QLD.[8]

References edit

  1. ^ Alderson, Anna; Martin, Marie (2007). "Outcomes based education: Where has it come from and where is it going?". Issues of Educational Research. 17 – via IIER.
  2. ^ Alderson, Anna; Martin, Marie (2007). "Outcomes based education: Where is it going?". Issues in Educational Research. 17.
  3. ^ Berlach, Richard; McNaught, Keith (2007). "Outcomes based education? Rethinking the provision of compulsory education in Western Australia". Issues in Educational Research. 17 (1): 1–12 – via Research Online.
  4. ^ Kessell, Steve (21 May 2006). "Let's call a spade a spade". The Sunday Times. Archived from the original on 29 June 2016.
  5. ^ Kennedy, Peter (2014). Tales from Boomtown. Crawley: University of Western Australia Press. p. 268.
  6. ^ AAP (20 October 2009). "WA dumps Outcomes Based Education (OBE)". News.com.au.
  7. ^ "OBE is dead, long live content: PLATO". ABC News. 24 September 2008.
  8. ^ "The origin of Platoqld – Platowa". PLATO QLD.