Skip to content
Childcare, Education Training

Day of Action – rally in Martin Place

Independent Education Union of Australia NSW/ACT Branch 2 mins read

15 October 2025

• When Wednesday 15 October, 11.30am for 11.45am

• Where Top of Martin Place, Sydney (opposite NSW Parliament House)

• What Press conference and photo opportunity

• Who IEUA NSW/ACT Branch Secretary Carol Matthews; preschool teachers

The union representing teachers in early childhood education and care in NSW and the ACT is today holding a Day of Action rally on behalf of teachers and educators in community preschools in NSW.

As part of the IEU’s Start Strong, Pay Fair campaign, the union and preschools are calling on the NSW government to fund pay rises that properly value the work of preschool staff.

“We urge the NSW government to step up and address staff shortages caused by inadequate pay and conditions in community preschools,” IEUA NSW/ACT Branch Secretary Carol Matthews said.

“Teachers, children, parents and the wider community all stand to gain from a strong preschool sector.”

More than 500 early childhood teachers and educators, parents, children and supporters, dressed in pink, will gather at the top of Martin Place, opposite NSW Parliament House, to bring the fight for fair pay to the attention of politicians.

Staff in community preschools earn up to 30% less a year than their counterparts in schools with similar qualifications and roles, and 15% less than staff in long day care centres.

Community preschools are staffed by professional and experienced teachers and run by volunteer committees of parents whose only priorities are children’s education and safety – not profit.

Funding for community preschools is derived only from the NSW government and parents. On average, more than 80 per cent of funding received by community preschools is spent on wages.

“The NSW government has rejected our request for increased funding for wages for teachers and educators after months of bargaining,” Matthews said.

“Without an increase in NSW government funding to lift pay and conditions, community preschools may be forced to cap enrolments, increase fees for families and, in some cases, close entirely.”

The union also anticipates the early childhood education and care sector, including community preschools, will have to raise salaries to address the systemic, gender-based undervaluation of its highly feminised workforce (more than 90 per cent of staff are women).

“To address the gender pay gap, community preschools need funding support from the NSW government,” Matthews said.

Contacts

IEUA NSW/ACT Branch Secretary Carol Matthews 0418 272 902

Media Andrew Taylor 0477 902 040, [email protected]

The IEUA NSW/ACT Branch represents over 32,000 teachers, principals and support staff in Catholic and independent schools, early childhood centres and post-secondary colleges.

Authorised by Carol Matthews, IEUA NSW/ACT Branch Secretary

Media

More from this category

  • Education Training, Union
  • 11/11/2025
  • 11:04
National Tertiary Education Union

Deakin University admits underpaying staff almost $3 million

The National Tertiary Education Union has welcomed Deakin University's pledge to backpay casual staff underpaid almost $3 million. The university announced on Tuesday it would start repayments, with roughly 440 staff affected by $2.9 million in underpayments over eight years. NTEU members have engaged in a long-running campaign including allegations of systemic underpayment of casual academics in the Fair Work Commission. The total figure is expected to rise beyond $2.9 million as more staff come forward. Deakin has previously acknowledged underpayments to sessional staff following union pressure and investigation into unlawful piece-rate-style payment practices for marking. The latest Deakin revelations…

  • Education Training
  • 10/11/2025
  • 17:02
NextEd Group

NextEd launches Australia’s first ChatGPT Edu deployment in vocational education

Monday 10 November 2025 Sydney, Australia: NextEd Group Limited (ASX: NXD), one of Australia’s leading tertiary education providers, today announced a collaboration with OpenAI…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training
  • 07/11/2025
  • 00:01
3P Learning

Maths program helps students gain NAPLAN edge, national study shows

The Research Report, The Impact of Mathletics on NAPLAN Numeracy Performance Images & B-Roll video here A new national study has found that Australian primary school students who regularly used the digital maths program, Mathletics, achieved significantly higher results in the 2024 NAPLAN numeracy tests compared to students who did not use the program. The research, based on data from more than 1,000 Australian schools, identified a clear statistically significant correlation between program usage and improved numeracy performance among Year 3 and Year 5 students. Key findings include: Year 3 students using Mathletics scored on average 7.6 points higher than…

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.