Introduction
During 2018 and 2019 Australian student strikes and rallies, numbering up to 150 000 participants nationally, have joined international efforts demanding immediate action to prevent catastrophic climate change. Although these have been portrayed by politicians and media outlets addicted to mining company profits as an aberration, Australia has a long history, or our story, of students walking out of the classroom to demand change be made.
At a school level issues have included resistance to corporal punishment and gender segregation as well as campaigns to increase student control over what they can wear, say, learn and do.
Confronted by racism, transphobia, homophobia, and age and gender discrimination, students have often had to stand up for their rights both within and beyond school boundaries.
Despite facing suspension, expulsion and beatings school students have often participated, if not led the way, in campaigns opposing war, environmental destruction and nuclear weapons. Sometimes they have done so with the support of parents, teachers and other allies, often they have had to go it alone.
Action by school students has taken many forms, both individual and collective. Outside of events too big or controversial for the mainstream media to ignore, or smaller ones captured by alternative and student media, the majority of them have gone undocumented. The following chronology, put together by Iain McIntyre, focuses on strikes and other forms of direct action. As such it is only a partial dip into the past. Nevertheless these glimpses demonstrate that rather than being illogical or a waste of time, student activism has played an important role in advancing progress and resisting injustice.
Do you have anecdotes and/or photographs related to school student activism? We welcome additions to this list, just contact the Librarians.
Years: 1914 – 2022
Melbourne, 1914
Students and their parents at Crib Point organised a strike after the Education Department moved their toilets over the summer break to a school at Shoreham and failed to replace them before the recommencement of school. The community had been poorly treated with classes, which numbered 64 children, held in a private hall with no permanent teacher.
Sydney, 1918
From 1913 to the 1940s commercial schools provided special vocational training in book-keeping and business skills in NSW. In 1918 more than 50 students at Central Commercial School, Petersham struck for a week so that they could enjoy the same two week holiday break that students at other high schools received.
Altona, 1925
In 1925 300 students struck at Altona High over a shortage of clean water due to supplies being siphoned off for the Williamstown Racecourse.
Rylstone, 1926
160 students stayed home from school in protest at being forced to study in a shed during sweltering heat long after the school buildings had been damaged in a fire.
Adelaide, 1932
As part of protests against harsh discipline, beatings and poor food students at the Roseworthy Agricultural College hooted teachers and refused to do any work.
Mackay, 1933
Children from Pacific-Islander-Australian families went on strike to demand they be allowed to continue to attend the school they had gone to for years rather than be forced to go to a new, racially segregated, one.
Glenn Innes, 1938
Complaining of freezing transport students from Glenn Innes Highschool refused to board school buses.
Tumolin, 1938
Students refused to attend classes following the failure of Education Department to remove a teacher who had breached state policies by hitting one of their female pupils with a cane.
Sydney, 1943
Students and parents set up a picket line outside Brookvale Public School during a strike over classes being conducted in an open shed for 18 months after a National Emergency Services first aid post took over the campus as part of military measures. The protest had immediate success with the federal government agreeing to give the school buildings back to the community.
Glenora, 1948
50 students from the Upper Derwent Valley in Tasmania refused to attend school in protest at having to travel in an unhygienic bus.
Marysville, 1949
In 1949 students at Marysville demonstrated in the town centre and struck for 5 days after being forced to attend school in a poorly heated and ill-lit hall.
Melbourne, 1951
70 students walked out of Altona Primary School during winter due to shivering conditions exacerbated by broken windows and the need to leave doors open to compensate for a lack of lighting. Months later they struck again after the Ministry of Education failed to honour its promise to build an additional classroom.
Tooleybuc, 1951
Having demolished two schools before a new one was completed the NSW Education Department jammed 130 students into a room and an unlined galvanised iron hall whose walls and roof had to be propped up with timber. The school in the Riverina district lacked fresh water and following an outbreak of encephalitis in the area all but five students struck under the slogan of “health before education.” The strike was called off after a government contractor guaranteed that new classrooms would be ready within a month.
Newcastle, 1956
Having long ignored complaints about overcrowding at Newcastle Central Junior Technical School the Education Department hired seven extra teachers after families elected to boycott classes.
Perth, 1963
Following a seven-day school strike the Education Department began providing buses for children at South Coogee Primary School.
Sydney, 1966
Disgusted at Australia’s involvement in the Vietnam War future playwright Louis Nowra tore “bullet” holes in the Australian flag, smeared it with tomato sauce to simulate blood and hung it from his school’s flag pole.
Sydney, 1966
A 15 year old student was expelled from Sydney Grammar after refusing to take part in mock “search and destroy” military exercises based on operations carried out in Vietnam.
Melbourne, 1967
Bearing placards with slogans reading things such as “Scholarships Not Battleships”, “Love Thy Asian Neighbour” and “Dead Soldiers Don’t Rise Again on the Third Day” 50 male students at the Methodist private school Kingswood College staged a sit-in on the school’s oval against conscription.
Melbourne and Sydney, 1968
Infuriating school authorities and delighting students, more than 20 radical highschool newspapers emerged in both cities during 1968 and 1969. With students regularly attending anti-war rallies Vietnam and conscription were key topics alongside denunciations of the use of violence to punish students and other oppressive school conditions. In response the police were called in and students expelled for producing and distributing Ubique Underground at Melbourne’s University High, but activists still managed to produce nine editions in one year as well as regularly paste up posters on school walls. At Highett Highschool students responded to a call by underground newspaper Treason to campaign for the abolition of the prefect system by initially boycotting school elections before voting in four ‘anti-prefects’. In Sydney many activities and publications were coordinated by High School Students Against the War in Vietnam (HSSAWV) who drew 400 students to an anti-war teach-in and around 1000 to a peace rally.
Sydney, 1968
850 students struck at Penrith High School against overcrowding and a lack of science facilities.
Brisbane, 1969
A member of activist group Students In Dissent was suspended from Inala State Highschool in 1969 for advising others about their rights regarding uniforms. Having been harassed by four political police officers from the state’s Special Branch Police for handing out leaflets outside the school she was subsequently banned from attending any school in the state. In response the Queensland Trade and Labour council passed a motion of protest and a high profile teach-in regarding the issue of student rights was held by the Queensland Education Reform Committee. A subsequent protest outside the entrance to the Education Department headquarters saw police push and drag away more than 100 students and teachers. Despite the heavy police presence a small group snuck into the building to leave a list of demands on the department Director’s desk. Following her continued expulsion the student later chained herself to the state government’s Treasury Building for 10 hours before police removed her.
Melbourne, 1970
300 students at Mordiallac High School went on strike against rules banning males from having long hair.
Sydney, 1970
Fifth and sixth form students at Cleveland Boy’s High School cancelled a planned one-day strike after the Education Department acceded to their demand that construction work around the school be cleaned up and blocked toilets fixed.
Australia, 1970-1971
Marking the point at which Australian society began to majorly move against the Vietnam War, Moratorium rallies involving hundreds of thousands of people were held around the country in May and September 1970 as well as in June 1971. Given that they and their friends were facing being forced into the military students unsurprisingly heeded the call to “Stop Work to Stop the War.” Defying widespread threats of expulsion, including those given by Victorian Premier Henry Bolte, tens of thousands took part in Moratorium marches nationally. Many also attended related events such as a Sydney forum and march in early May 1970 which brought together 1000 striking school students and teachers.
Prior to each major event many students and some staff were disciplined for wearing Moratorium badges. Ibrox Park Boy’s School in Sydney attracted much media attention after dozens of students, six of whom were caned, wore the badges to protest the suspension of one of their peers for doing the same. A campaign was subsequently held to write in the names of suspended students on ballot papers electing prefects. Discord spread amongst teachers after the school principal removed current affairs publications and other materials discussing the war from the library and banned staff members from holding a meeting about the issue. Following ructions over the distribution of leaflets outside the school one anti-war teacher had to take out an injunction against a pro-war member of staff who continually harassed him and cut his forehead by slamming a gate in his face.
70 students and four teachers at Sydney’s Fort Street Girls Highschool wore black armbands and held a rally on school grounds days before the first Moratorium whilst five teachers at Sydney Grammar wore badges in solidarity with a student who was caned for wearing one. In Canberra 19 students at Telopea Park Highschool walked out of school when ordered to remove their badges. Some schools, such as Seven Hills in Sydney, also threatened to suspend teachers for wearing anti-war badges and a Catholic school in Goulburn fired a teacher for refusing to remove his. Responding to the persecution of students and staff teachers held a rally outside the offices of the NSW State Education Department. Whilst some schools refused to engage in the matter at all a minority, such as Sydney’s Hunters Hill and Pittwater highschools, openly allowed students and staff to express their opinions.
Sydney, 1971
Repeated class walk outs and strikes were held at Blacktown High to protest overcrowding.
Adelaide, 1971
200 students at Angle Park Girls Technical School went on strike and marched on parliament to protest the forced transfer of a teacher after she was raided and arrested for involvement in anti-racist and anti-war activities.
Melbourne, 1971
Following a strike and rally in April by 500 students, mainly from University High, 3000 defied threats to prevent them from sitting exams by attending a city rally during school hours on May 31. Hundreds of others also went on strike around the rest of the state in protests organized by the Victorian Secondary Students Union over issues including corporal punishment and racist and sexist discrimination.
Perth, 1971
A Belmont Highschool student’s suspension for having sideburns was cancelled after 150 of his peers walked out of class to hold a meeting on the footpath.
Sydney, 1972
Students at Randwick Boys Highschool went on strike over substandard facilities.
Perth, 1972
As part of ructions over compulsory uniforms that lasted for years the principal at Hollywood Highschool locked students out of a Parents & Citizens meeting discussing the issue.
Sydney, 1972
Following a strike and protest at a western suburbs highschool over French nuclear testing in the South Pacific, a rally involving hundreds of students from 22 different schools was held during school hours in Martin Plaza.
Perth, 1972
100 students at Kalamunda highschool went on strike demanding improved canteen facilities and an end to compulsory sport and corporal punishment.
Sydney, 1972
A series of protests at Fort Street highschool won the reinstatement of 6 students suspended for their part in a two day strike over the issue of male hair length. In addition to overturning the punishment school authorities agreed to waive hair length rules and end harassment of student activists.
Australia, 1972
Following months of organizing, tens of thousands students from hundreds of schools joined Australia’s first national school strike on September 20 1972. The strike received support from tertiary student unions, including the Australian Union of Students, Young Labor organisations, socialist groups such as Resistance and the Communist Party of Australia, and some trade unions. Common demands included the democratization of education, transparency around school rules, increases in education funding and an end to corporal punishment and gender segregation.
In Canberra strikers rallied outside Parliament House and in Perth they gathered at the Supreme Court Gardens. In Melbourne they marched from Treasury Gardens to the City Square and in Brisbane from the Botanic Gardens to Roma Street Forum. School ties were burnt during a rally of thousands in Hyde Park, Sydney. Demanding a school gymnasium be built 200 students from Kingsmeadow Highschool in Launceston went on strike and marched to Prospect Highschool. Having gathered hundreds more strikers from there and the city’s other highschool they wound up at the Launceston Town Hall.
Many rallies also took place within school grounds or on the footpaths outside them. At Penshurst Girls Highschool in Sydney 400 protested and at Nowra 500 held a sit-in. In the wake of the strike students at MacRobertson Girls High in Melbourne decided to unilaterally abolish school uniforms, leading to 40 of them being suspended.
Melbourne, 1972
Students, parents and teachers across Melbourne took action against Education Department plans to further increase class numbers through the removal of portable rooms. At Watsonia High locals blockaded entrances to the school by parking cars across them. When contractors cut holes in fences and tried to get the portables out people prevented them by lying down in front of trucks. At Eltham High students saved their portable by barricading the front gate to the school, welding up bolts to hold gates together, entangling fences in barbed wire and flooding the surrounding area to bog trucks down. In Kew students staged a sit-in and refused to exit portables until the department agreed to leave them in place.
Melbourne, 1973
Students involved with socialist group Resistance picketed highschool beauty contests.
Adelaide, 1973
200 secondary students went on strike and marched down Rundle Mall to the Education Department where school ties were burnt in a protest against mandatory uniforms.
Melbourne, 1973
Having already defeated school regulations governing hair length and uniforms via a campaign of concerted noncompliance, 400 out of 900 students at Upwey High School went on strike in support of teacher stoppages against staffing cuts. When the teachers finished their industrial action around 150 students elected to stay out, marching down to the Ferntree Gully National Park to hold a day long festival.
Melbourne, 1974
Parents and students occupied portable classrooms at Melton West Primary to prevent their removal.
Canberra, 1974
More than 100 students from Canberra Highschool occupied the roadway of Bindubi Street on two occasions as part of a campaign to gain a pedestrian crossing.
Melbourne, 1974
Students at Richmond Highschool went on strike over the forced transferral of a teacher.
Melbourne, 1974
Chronic overcrowding at Brunswick Girls Highschool led to a mass march of the school population down Sydney road and into the city during school hours.
Canberra, 1975
Students walked out of classes at Narrabundah High School following ventilation issues in their library which caused some to experience headaches and chest pains. Delays in repairing the system meant that pupils had lost access to books and other materials for over a month. Banners and signs displayed during a protest rally on the school grounds read “We want a pollution-free library”, “Ventilation now” and “Air is free”.
Sydney, 1976
Demanding urgently needed repairs children skipped class at Forest Lodge Primary School and with their parents rallied outside the Education Department.
Canberra, 1976
A decision to introduce bus fares for school students saw 150 of them march on Parliament House, where a flustered Minister for the Capital Territory, Tony Staley, joked that the impost would be good for the students’ health as it would encourage them to walk more. A 13-year-old’s retort that the same could be said for the removal of Commonwealth cars for politicians and bureaucrats drew no reply.
Sydney, 1977
Students at Sydney’s Auburn Girls Highschool staged a sit-down strike over the principal’s refusal to let them wear pants during winter.
Melbourne, 1978
Over 700 students staged a walk out at Newlands High School over the lack of a library, gym, assembly hall, cafeteria and other basic facilities. The students marched around the school blocking traffic and holding banners reading, “Make Newlands A School, Not A Slum.”
Adelaide, 1980
A student strike at Marion High School forced its headmaster to stop punishing students by hitting them with a cane.
Melbourne, 1981
Due to overcrowding families removed their support for Footscray Technical School with the result that many students stopped attending. Having defied threats from the Education Department to take them to court, the families ended the boycott with a funeral procession from the school to the Education Department’s headquarters in the city.
Melbourne, 1985
Students at Lalor High School, where around 70% of pupils were from migrant families, walked off and rallied in a nearby park after a lack of teaching staff threatened their ability to complete Year 10.
Canberra, 1986
250 students from Watson Highschool occupied the ACT Schools Authority’s foyer during a protest against the closure of their school.
Melbourne, 1987
Opposing cuts to education funding 150 secondary school students went on strike and marched on the office of Mr Cathie, the Australian Labor Party minister for Education, chanting, “1,2,3 and a bit, Mr Cathie’s full of shit!” After he refused to meet their representatives the students blockaded the building whilst others rode up and down the elevators. When two representatives were finally allowed in they discovered the Minister had run away, prompting the chant, “When the going gets tough, Cathie goes on holiday!”
Sydney, 1988
Responding to experiences of racism at Cleveland Street High School 90 Aboriginal students struck with 60 attending temporary classes at the University Settlement hall in Chippendale. Joined by other First Nations students facing discrimination they and their community campaigned to establish Pemulwuy Koori College, which opened in 1991.
Perth, 1988
Complaining of racial discrimination students went on strike at Girrawheen Highschool for two days. On the second day of action they marched to Balga Highschool where students from that school joined them for a rally on the school oval.
Perth, 1991
Highschool students joined with the local chapter of AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT-UP) to protest the Western Australian state government’s ‘It’s OK to Say No’ abstinence program. Fliers and condoms were handed out at school gates.
Melbourne, 1992-1993
In 1992 the newly elected Kennett Liberal-National state government instituted massive education cutbacks that shut down dozens of schools across the state eventually leading to the loss of more than 250 as well as thousands of teaching and cleaning staff. Students and their families joined workers and others in rallies and strikes that numbered in the hundreds of thousands. Amidst various smaller rallies and protests, that included holding classes outside politicians’ offices, a group from Coburg North Highschool held a vigil outside state parliament for 30 days.
Most significantly students, parents and supporters occupied five schools to prevent them being vandalised, bulldozed and sold off. Alongside occupations of a Bendigo primary school, Joseph Banks Senior College in Doveton and Fitzroy Senior College (which was saved and reopened in 2004), two of the community takeovers went further in also reopening their schools for education. Despite being threatened with having to repeat a year of school, students continued to attend classes at them.
Richmond Senior High School was taken over and run by a collective of parents, unemployed teachers and activists for almost a year before being evicted. Large pickets followed with the result that male students, who with the closure lacked a school in the area, were given an annex at Collingwood Secondary Highschool. Plans to demolish the school were withdrawn and it was subsequently reopened in 1994 as Melbourne Girls College.
Northlands Senior High School, which had been running a unique program involving Koori community participation, was also occupied and run by a collective of parents, students and supporters. During their campaign they additionally held a “mobile” school which took over the lawns at private schools and universities as well as the stairs of State Parliament. Eventually the combination of these actions and successful court action saw Northlands reopen with its original programs intact.
Canberra, 1993
Students from Narrabundah College and other schools went on strike in support of teachers who were undertaking industrial action against cuts to education funding. During the strike student Belinda Cheney, declared “the strike is an opportunity to stand up to fight a system that bullies us, not to have free time without class.”
Canberra, 1994
3000 secondary school students took part in a strike on October 27 against education cuts with hundreds more striking at three schools a few days later. At Canberra High all 150 strikers were given detention, but this failed to deter further protest with the result that 80 teaching positions across the ACT were saved.
Brisbane, 1995
As part of national protests against the French government resuming nuclear testing at Moruroa atoll, 4000 secondary students from 45 schools went on strike and rallied at King George Square.
Nambour, 1995
Students at Nambour Highschool walked out after one of their friends was suspended for wearing a nose-ring.
Tuggerah, 1996
250 students went on strike at Corpus Christi College for two days demanding that the school withdraw the suspension of four of their number over unproven allegations of selling marijuana.
Sydney, 1996
Classes at Lurnea Highschool were disrupted after students went on strike the day before teachers took industrial action against cuts to teaching staff.
Gloucester, 1997
Families withdrew hundreds of children from NSW’s Gloucester Primary School in a protest over substandard facilities and overcrowding.
Australia, 1998
Students across Australia took part in a series of high school walk outs against Pauline Hanson and One Nation. The party’s racist policies were the main target of protest, but strikers also opposed its support for reintroducing corporal punishment and police-enforced curfews for young people. One rally in June saw more than 1000 demonstrate in Melbourne, another in August involved 300 in Ballarat and a September rally in Sydney drew more than 500. Other strikes and protests were regularly held in cities such as Brisbane, Newcastle, Perth, Sydney, Wollongong and Darwin.
Australia, 1998
Echoing events in the real world students on the ABC’s Heartbreak High TV program went on strike after their headmaster banned after-school sport and shut down the school newspaper.
Australia, 1999
National protests against the construction of the Jabiluka uranium mine were bolstered through a series of high school walk offs which saw more than 1500 students join rallies in Melbourne, Adelaide, Sydney, Hobart and Brisbane.
Maitland, 2000
250 students at Rutherford Technology High School went on strike demanding an overhaul of school rules to give students more rights.
Newcastle, 2000
Students went on strike and rallied in the Hunter Street Mall against racist mandatory sentencing laws.
Perth, 2001
In the build up to a May 1 anti-corporate blockade of the Perth stock exchange members of socialist youth group Resistance distributed 500 copies of their newspaper Student Underground to schools around the city.
Sydney, 2001
A group of Year 5 students at Bert Oldfield Public School went on strike for a week over the replacement of their teacher.
Australia, 2003
During 2003 tens of thousands of students defied threats of suspension to join Books Not Bombs strikes against the bombing of Iraq. In NSW ALP Premier Bob Carr tried and failed to ban the protests so police arrested and assaulted students instead. On the day Iraq was bombed some schools, such as Paralowie High School in South Australia and Salisbury College in NSW, closed after many students responded to the message “when the bombs drop, school stops.” Some students faced with lock-ins escaped school via windows. Whilst thousands gathered in town and city centres around the country some protested on school grounds, such as at Smiths Hill High School in Wollongong.
Lake Macquarie, 2003
Students at Nords Wharf Public School went on strike after teaching numbers were cut.
Melbourne, 2003
After a high school student was ordered by the principal of Strathmore Secondary College to change out of a T-shirt reading “Nobody Knows I’m A Lesbian”, her fellow students turned up to school with shirts bearing messages such as “Nobody Knows I’m Bulimic”, “Nobody Knows I’m Pregnant”, and “Nobody Knows I’m On Steroids”.
Parkes, 2004
A week after 100 students and teachers were overcome by heat and signed out of classes at Parkes Highschool in Western NSW, 200 stayed home and hundreds more walked out when classroom temperatures reached 40 degrees Celsius.
Melbourne, 2007
Hundreds of students defied instructions from Prime Minister Rudd telling them to “stick to their books as this is not a time for kids to get mixed up in protest activity” and rallied at Flinders Street Station as part of the Walk Out Against George Bush school strike against a visit by the US President for the Asia Pacific Economic Conference (APEC).
Hobart, 2007
600 students went on strike to protest against the proposed, and eventually cancelled, Gunns pulp mill as well as the continuing destruction of old growth forest it threatened to accelerate.
Melbourne, 2008
Around 1000 students went on strike at Sunbury Downs Secondary College against plans to merge it with another school.
Melbourne, 2008
After one of their peers was threatened with suspension for wearing a “Free Tibet” t-shirt others responded by hanging signs reading the same slogan around their neck before holding a spontaneous protest outside Collingwood College.
Tasmania, 2011
Students protested at Goodwood Primary School against cuts to Tasmanian education funding.
Sydney, 2013
High school students across Australia took part in the campaign for marriage equality by organising speak outs and joining rallies.
Newcastle, 2014
Around 100 school students went on strike and joined a rally calling for the abolition of university fees.
Sydney, 2016
Students took part in protests across Australia to defend the Safe Schools anti-bullying program. Rallies were held in many cities and a Save the Safe Schools coalition formed which brought together representatives from 535 primary and high schools to fight funding cuts and restrictions on support for LGBTIQA+ students.
Adelaide, 2017
A meme shared by students at Mark Oliphant College during a strike over disciplinary action levelled against those who had not followed the school’s dress code.
Brisbane, 2018
Conservative politicians and media outlets, who never tire of claiming that their “free speech” rights are being stamped on when they are called out on their racism and inaccurate reporting, went apoplectic after a nine-year old student refused to stand for the national anthem. Her protest was held on the basis that the song “completely disregards the Indigenous Australians who were here before us.” Despite being punished with a lunch-time detention and threatened with suspension the school backed off after her action drew support from around the globe.
Australia, 2018-2019
Inspired by Swedish student Greta Thunberg Australian students joined her Friday school strikes to demand climate action. Australian participants in global strike events have numbered up to 150 000 nationally, as part of an estimated 1.4 million around the world.
Brisbane, 2019
Hundreds of students at Kenmore State High School protested uniform policies, and a recent threat to suspend an autistic student and others for wearing non-regulatory socks, by holding a Day of Dissent during which they flouted rules by attending with untucked shirts, incorrect socks and coloured hair.
Caves Beach, 2019
After a teacher suggested a Newcastle woman’s appearance had contributed to her recent rape and that men had to “fight the urge to rape” due to female clothing, dozens of students at Swansea High School in New South Wales went on strike. Holding a protest outside the school and displaying a banner which read “Not all men have the urge 2 rape. Women have the right 2 wear what they want” they demanded the teacher resign. A video of the teacher’s comments during a class debate was shared online and viewed more than 110 000 times.
Melbourne, 2022
Students at Elisabeth Murdoch College in Langwarrin walked out on Year 12 photos after those with coloured hair and piercings were told they could not take part. One student argued “”We deserve to be allowed to be vibrant, we deserve to be allowed to express ourselves — express how we’re feeling. Especially after the last two years of being locked inside, trapped in our houses and in our heads.”
Acknowledgement
Thanks to Francis Dupuis-Deri for their valuable help with updating this chronology.