Research indicates high education aspirations among Indigenous youth despite lesser access

Callan Morse
Callan Morse Published August 21, 2025 at 11.30am (AWST)

New research has revealed Indigenous students value education and have strong aspirations for success while indicating there is an "urgent need" to address inequalities in Australian education.

The Edith Cowan University (ECU) research led by Kurongkurl Katitjin, Centre for Indigenous Australian Education and Research researcher, Dr Mary-anne Macdonald, surveyed 536 secondary students from across Western Australia to investigate their perceptions of education.

Students' experiences at school and the family support they received were compared through the study, which also aiming to understand how experiences, similarities and differences between Indigenous and non-Indigenous students shape their education aspirations.

The study found Indigenous students were more likely to value school attendance and completion than non-Indigenous students.

Additionally, although both Indigenous and non-Indigenous students shared similar aspirations, family support, and belief in the value of education, Indigenous students were less likely to see tertiary study as part of their future.

The study's participants hailed largely from remote or regional Western Australia, although approximately half attended boarding schools in Perth or regional towns.

Dr Macdonald said the study showed Indigenous students and their families are keen to achieve benefit from education and recognise the importance of school attendance and completion.

However, she said despite Indigenous students' positive beliefs regarding Year 12 completion, they were less likely to picture themselves pursuing further education beyond Year 12.

"This finding is likely tied to structural inequity," Dr Macdonald said.

"Higher education in Australia is geared towards students who reside in urban areas, have higher family education and income levels, and have access to ICT and education infrastructure."

The study found school-level differences had a greater impact on students' experiences than cultural background, particularly regarding support services and sense of belonging, with respectful teacher-student relationships were especially motivating for Indigenous students.

Dr Macdonald said Indigenous students were far more likely to say their motivation to attend school was linked to the quality of their relationships with teachers.

"That tells us that relationships with teachers really matter," Dr Macdonald said.

"When students feel respected and supported by their teachers, they're more likely to stay engaged – and that's especially true for Indigenous students."

The research also found evidence of the harmful effects of "deficit discourse" – a pattern of thinking that assumes Indigenous students are less capable or less interested in learning.

"These assumptions can be incredibly damaging," Dr Macdonald said.

"Our data shows that Indigenous students have strong self-belief and motivation – so when teachers or institutions have low expectations, they're undermining students who are doing everything they can to succeed."

According to the study, students in Western Australia experience significant variability in school quality, with schools differing widely in the level of support they provide with homework completion, career information and post-secondary transitions, positive school culture and promotion of Indigenous culture.

Dr Macdonald is urging policy makers and education leaders to invest in addressing the equity gap in public and rural schools – particularly when it comes to access to quality teachers, internet and computers for homework, tuition and education role models.

"Our study shows that secondary education is equally desirable amongst Indigenous and non-Indigenous students, but it is not equally accessible."

"We need to capitalise on students' desire for education and address some of the resourcing roadblocks that impact education attainment."

Authored by Dr Macdonald, Eyal Gringart, Terry Kessaris and Renae Isaacs-Guthridge, the paper, 'Desiring education, exhibiting agency, experiencing systemic obstacles: Re-examining the perceptions and experiences of education amongst Indigenous and non-Indigenous students in Australia' is available via the Australian Journal of Indigenous Education.

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National Indigenous Times

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