Skip to content
Education Training

Q Project revolutionises evidence-informed education to empower teachers

Monash University 4 mins read

A new report from Monash University’s Q Project, highlights the key ways in which educators are being supported to use research evidence in their classrooms.

Despite widespread calls for research-informed improvement in Australian education, there is very little evidence about best practice use of research and how it can be supported in schools and systems. 

There has been a distinct lack of guidance and support for Australian teachers and school leaders who want to improve outcomes using evidence-informed approaches. Over the past five years, the Q Project has sought to address these major gaps and was the first project internationally to investigate how well schools use research. 

The Impact Report, which encapsulates the research work of the Q Project, documents how the project has reshaped the educational landscape about understanding and improving research evidence use in Australian schools. 

Over its lifespan, the Q Project engaged with more than 2,100 Australian teachers and school leaders from over 1,700 schools, and over 200 Australian and international system leaders from educational jurisdictions, professional associations, policy institutions and research brokerage organisations.

The Q Project has developed practical tools and resources, professional learning programs, and hosted interactive events that reached over 83,000 educators spanning government, Catholic and independent sectors. 

Project Director, Associate Professor Mark Rickinson said, “The Q Project developed not only a unique evidence base about quality use of research but also a powerful practice base of educators and leaders committed to its development in practice. It built capacity, improved practice and shifted debate within many different schools and system organisations across Australia and internationally.” 

“Together with schools and system organisations across Australia and internationally, we developed a distinctive approach to research use as a key pillar for improving the educational outcomes of children and young people throughout the world,” Professor Rickinson said.

Professor Martin Westwell, Chief Executive at the Department for Education, South Australia said, “Q has made a difference already in our system. It’s created space for people to stop and think about the use of research. Schools and even systems are such busy places that sometimes it can be difficult to imagine what other ways might be.” 

Project participants reported improvements in their individual, leadership and network capacities to use research well. The Impact Report identifies that teachers and school leaders want to use research in their work, but do not always feel well equipped or sufficiently supported to do so. The provision of targeted resources and developmental opportunities can build educators’ and leaders’ capacities to improve their use of research in practice. 

Natalie Manser, Assistant Principal at Wantirna College said, “The Q Project for me really assisted in providing a framework for how teachers and educators and leaders should engage with research. I think the idea of having the skill set, the mindset, and also the relationship around research though, that sort of triad if you like, needs to be humming in order for the decisions we make to have the impact that we need them to have.”

Participants reported greater research use awareness and reflective capacities, as well as improvements in their confidence and skills to use research well. These skills span how to access and interpret research, incorporate it into existing practice, and embed it within school organisational structures and processes (e.g., meetings, schedules, professional learning communities, inquiry cycles, etc.). 

Participants’ improved capacities meant that they were more open-minded about the value of using research and more likely to engage with it. 

Participants also reported improved leadership capacities that involved a development in their own leadership mindsets and behaviours, such as better role-modelling of quality research use to staff, or improved communication about the rationale behind research use decisions. 

Chief Investigator, Professor Lucas Walsh, said, “We talk a lot about evidence informed approaches but just how well are we using research evidence? Do we have the capability and support within our education systems, teachers and school leaders? Too often these are afterthoughts, but need to be built into the DNA of everything we do in and for schools.”

“The Q Project shifted the debate about evidence use in schools. In the new world of alternative facts and turning away from expertise, our research affirms that now, more than ever, we need to improve our use of evidence to support the education of children and young people,” Professor Walsh said. 

The Monash Q Project’s research and resources have had a powerful impact on educators' use of research evidence in their practice and have the potential to support teachers in improving their profession and outcomes for Australian students.

Finishing on the 30 of June, the Q Project was a $6 million partnership between Monash University and generously supported by the Paul Ramsay Foundation, as part of Monash University’s Change it. For Future Generations philanthropic campaign.

From July 2024, the Q Project’s work will be continued in the form of the Monash Q Lab.

To learn more about the Q Project, or to view the Impact Report, please visit: https://www.monash.edu/education/research/projects/qproject

- ENDS -

Monash University’s philanthropic campaign, Change It. For Future Generations provides a clear pathway for the community to take meaningful action on three global challenges of our age: climate change, geopolitical security and thriving communities. To learn more, please visit Monash University Giving.

MEDIA SPOKESPEOPLE

Associate Professor Mark Rickinson, Project Lead Director of the Monash Q Project
Professor Lucas Walsh, Chief Investigator of the Monash Q Project

MEDIA ENQUIRIES 

Hande Cater, Media and Communications Manager
M: +61 4 5642 8906
E: hande.cater@monash.edu

GENERAL MEDIA ENQUIRIES

Monash Media
T: +61 (0) 3 9903 4840
E: media@monash.edu
For more Monash media stories, visit our news and events site 

More from this category

  • Education Training, Government NSW
  • 18/03/2025
  • 15:25
Independent Education Union of Australia NSW/ACT Branch

Claim farming ban: Union welcomes Bill to end predatory practice against innocent teachers

18 March 2025 The union representing teachers and support staff in non-government schools welcomes the NSW Labor government’s Bill to crack down on claim farming, introduced into the NSW Parliament today. Claim farming is a predatory practice of pressuring people to lodge fraudulent compensation claims for historical sexual abuse. NSW Attorney General Michael Daley said the Claim Farming Practices Prohibition Bill 2025 will stop the harm inflicted by claim farmers who seek to profit off vulnerable people such as victim survivors of child sexual abuse. Claim farming also has a catastrophic impact on innocent teachers who have been subjected to…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 18/03/2025
  • 11:17
Palliative Care Australia

Collaboration in action: strengthening paediatric palliative care education

“Together, let’s make compassionate care the standard,” says Annette Vickery, Paediatric Project Manager, Palliative Care Australia “Great things happen when passionate people come together…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, Government Federal
  • 18/03/2025
  • 09:35
Department of the House of Representatives

National Youth Parliament 2026 – Seeking Supplier

The Department of the House of Representatives is seeking a suitably qualified and experienced service provider to develop and deliver a National Youth Parliament to be held in Canberra in 2026. Participants in the National Youth Parliament will have the unique opportunity to learn about aspects of being a Member of Parliament, including the process by which bills are drafted, considered, and pass Parliament to become law. The provider will manage the event and deliver a program for 150 senior students, one per federal electorate, which complies with all child safety requirements and will achieve best practice educational outcomes. An…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.