Dr. Constable asks for a breakdown of male and female teaching staff numbers in WA public schools from 1998 to 2003. The answer provides the requested data, specifying which staff categories are included and excluded.

AnsweredQoN 1299Legislative Assembly
Asked
1 April 2003
Portfolio
Education and Training

QuestionView source ↗

(b) 1999; (c) 2000; (d) 2001; (e) 2002; and (f) 2003?
(c) 2000; (d) 2001; (e) 2002; and (f) 2003?
(d) 2001; (e) 2002; and (f) 2003?
(e) 2002; and (f) 2003?
(f) 2003?
(b) 1999; (c) 2000; (d) 2001; (e) 2002; and (f) 2003?
(c) 2000; (d) 2001; (e) 2002; and (f) 2003?
(d) 2001; (e) 2002; and (f) 2003?
(e) 2002; and (f) 2003?
(f) 2003?
(a) On 15 September 1998 8526 female 2181 male (b) On 15 September 1999 8996 female 2212 male (c) On 15 September 2000 9075 female 2163 male (d) On 15 September 2001 9041 female 2136 male (e) On 15 September 2002 9065 female 2105 male (f) On 17 March 2003 9170 female 2088 male (2) (a) On 15 September 1998 3836 female 3559 male (b) On 15 September 1999 4021 female 3594 male (c) On 15 September 2000 3985 female 3559 male (d) On 15 September 2001 3994 female 3542 male (e) On 15 September 2002 4068 female 3574 male (f) On 17 March 2003 3980 female 3462 male The figures relate to all employees categorised as primary or secondary teaching staff, including school psychologists and school administrators, (principals, deputy principals and heads of learning areas etc). Teachers in specialist schools, eg education support schools, and teachers who are ‘unattached’ because they are on extended leave or undertaking other duties, are not included.
(2) (a) On 15 September 1998 3836 female 3559 male (b) On 15 September 1999 4021 female 3594 male (c) On 15 September 2000 3985 female 3559 male (d) On 15 September 2001 3994 female 3542 male (e) On 15 September 2002 4068 female 3574 male (f) On 17 March 2003 3980 female 3462 male The figures relate to all employees categorised as primary or secondary teaching staff, including school psychologists and school administrators, (principals, deputy principals and heads of learning areas etc). Teachers in specialist schools, eg education support schools, and teachers who are ‘unattached’ because they are on extended leave or undertaking other duties, are not included.
(a) On 15 September 1998 3836 female 3559 male (b) On 15 September 1999 4021 female 3594 male (c) On 15 September 2000 3985 female 3559 male (d) On 15 September 2001 3994 female 3542 male (e) On 15 September 2002 4068 female 3574 male (f) On 17 March 2003 3980 female 3462 male The figures relate to all employees categorised as primary or secondary teaching staff, including school psychologists and school administrators, (principals, deputy principals and heads of learning areas etc). Teachers in specialist schools, eg education support schools, and teachers who are ‘unattached’ because they are on extended leave or undertaking other duties, are not included.
The figures relate to all employees categorised as primary or secondary teaching staff, including school psychologists and school administrators, (principals, deputy principals and heads of learning areas etc). Teachers in specialist schools, eg education support schools, and teachers who are ‘unattached’ because they are on extended leave or undertaking other duties, are not included.

AnswerView source ↗

Answered
26 June 2003
Responded by
Minister for Education and Training
Response time
86 days
(1)
(a) On 15 September 1998 8526 female 2181 male
(b) On 15 September 1999 8996 female 2212 male
(c) On 15 September 2000 9075 female 2163 male
(d) On 15 September 2001 9041 female 2136 male
(e) On 15 September 2002 9065 female 2105 male
(f) On 17 March 2003 9170 female 2088 male
(2)
(a) On 15 September 1998 3836 female 3559 male
(b) On 15 September 1999 4021 female 3594 male
(c) On 15 September 2000 3985 female 3559 male
(d) On 15 September 2001 3994 female 3542 male
(e) On 15 September 2002 4068 female 3574 male
(f) On 17 March 2003 3980 female 3462 male
The figures relate to all employees categorised as primary or secondary teaching staff, including school psychologists and school administrators, (principals, deputy principals and heads of learning areas etc). Teachers in specialist schools, eg education support schools, and teachers who are ‘unattached’ because they are on extended leave or undertaking other duties, are not included.

Explore WA Government Data

Search the full archive in the free dashboard, or query programmatically via API.

Explore more