AITSL was established on 1 January 2010 under the Labor government (Rudd/Gillard) as a public company limited by guarantee under the Corporations Act 2001 [1].
According to the Department of Education's official documentation, "The Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership (AITSL) commenced operations on 1 January 2010.
AITSL is a public company limited by guarantee under the Corporations Act 2001 and is subject to the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013" [3].
AITSL maintains an active website (aitsl.edu.au), produces annual reports, and continues to administer national professional standards for teachers and school leaders across Australia [4].
The Australian National Audit Office conducted a performance audit of AITSL in 2024, confirming it "leads the promotion of excellence in teaching and school leadership on behalf of education ministers" [5].
缺失背景
该 gāi 说法 shuō fǎ 遗漏 yí lòu 了 le 若干 ruò gān 关键 guān jiàn 事实 shì shí : :
The claim omits several critical facts:
1. **AITSL still exists today** - The organization was not scrapped and continues its operations under the current Albanese Labor government, with its 2024-25 annual report showing active programs and funding [2].
2. **Possible confusion with another agency** - The Coalition government did abolish the **Australian Workforce and Productivity Agency** in 2014 through the Australian Workforce and Productivity Agency Repeal Act 2014 [6].
This separate agency, established under the previous Labor government, was distinct from AITSL.
3. **What actually changed under the Coalition** - Rather than abolishing AITSL, the Coalition government (specifically Education Minister Christopher Pyne) made changes to AITSL's board composition in 2015.
The Australian Education Union criticized Pyne for "turning the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership (AITSL) into an unrepresentative body by stacking the board and removing any role for teachers' organisations" [7].
While *The Australian* is a mainstream media outlet (News Corp), the article title "Schools turn to cashless improvements" suggests it may not directly support the claim about AITSL being scrapped.
The article was inaccessible due to paywall restrictions during verification. *The Australian* has a center-right editorial leaning but is generally considered a credible news source, though its opinion pages often reflect conservative perspectives [8].
**Did Labor do something similar?**
Search conducted: "Labor government abolished education agencies institutes"
Finding: The Labor government (2007-2013) actually **established** AITSL in 2010, creating the national body for teaching and school leadership standards [1][3].
The Labor government also abolished or restructured agencies during its tenure, including:
- Changes to various education bodies during its 2007-2013 term
- Establishment of new agencies like AITSL and the Australian Workforce and Productivity Agency (which was later abolished by the Coalition)
This demonstrates that restructuring education agencies is standard practice across Australian governments of both political persuasions, not unique to the Coalition.
While the claim that AITSL was "scrapped" is factually false, there were legitimate concerns about changes made to AITSL under the Coalition government:
**Criticisms of Coalition changes:**
- The AEU accused Minister Pyne of politicizing AITSL by removing teacher union representation and appointing individuals from conservative think tanks like the Centre for Independent Studies [7]
- The changes were seen by critics as undermining the collaborative, multi-stakeholder approach that AITSL had operated under since 2010 [7]
**However, the broader context:**
- AITSL remained operational and continued its core functions throughout the Coalition government (2013-2022) and beyond
- The organization still sets national professional standards for teachers and principals
- Annual reports from 2013-14 through 2024-25 show continuous operations without interruption [2][9]
- The Coalition government's 2014 budget did make changes to education funding formulas, including altering school expenditure indexation rates that were projected to reduce funding growth [10], but this is distinct from abolishing AITSL
**Key context:** The abolition of the Australian Workforce and Productivity Agency in 2014 [6] may have been conflated with AITSL.
The organization maintains national professional standards for teaching and school leadership and produces annual reports showing continuous operations through 2024-25 [2][4].
The Coalition government did make changes to AITSL's governance structure in 2015 (specifically board composition changes that removed teacher union representation), but this is fundamentally different from abolishing the organization [7].
The organization maintains national professional standards for teaching and school leadership and produces annual reports showing continuous operations through 2024-25 [2][4].
The Coalition government did make changes to AITSL's governance structure in 2015 (specifically board composition changes that removed teacher union representation), but this is fundamentally different from abolishing the organization [7].