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Canberra Schools Battle Staffing Shortages as Enrolment Surges

Canberra's education sector faces staffing shortages and capacity concerns as term three begins, with growing demand outpacing infrastructure in key growth suburbs.

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By Canberra News Desk · Published 3 July 2026, 8:37 pm

2 min read

Updated 14 h ago· 4 July 2026, 4:32 am

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Canberra Schools Battle Staffing Shortages as Enrolment Surges
Photo: Photo by Guohua Song on Pexels

Canberra's schools and universities are grappling with significant challenges as the second half of 2026 unfolds, with enrolment pressures and staffing difficulties emerging as key concerns across the sector this week.

The ACT Education Directorate confirmed ongoing recruitment difficulties affecting schools across Gungahlin and Belconnen, where rapid population growth continues to strain existing facilities. Several primary schools in Ngunnawal and Bonner have reported shortages in specialist subjects including languages and science teachers, forcing some to consolidate classes or defer elective offerings.

At the tertiary level, the Australian National University and University of Canberra are both reporting record international student interest heading into second semester, though domestic applications remain steady. ANU's new research facility on North Road is expected to open for postgraduate engineering programs by early 2027, potentially addressing capacity concerns in STEM fields. UC, meanwhile, has expanded its nursing and allied health intake following strong employer demand in the region's growing healthcare sector.

A significant development emerged this week regarding the government's commitment to school infrastructure. The ACT Labor government outlined plans to accelerate classroom expansions at Nicholls Primary and Casey Primary, two of Canberra's fastest-growing catchment areas. Current enrolments at Nicholls have reached 650 students, exceeding original capacity projections by approximately 15 percent.

The public service workforce—which represents a substantial portion of Canberra's parent demographic—continues to shape education demand. Families relocating for federal government positions have contributed to Gungahlin's population increase of roughly 3.2 percent annually over the past three years, creating knock-on effects for schools across the district.

However, challenges extend beyond infrastructure. Teacher wellbeing remains a critical issue, with union representatives noting stress-related absences have increased marginally since the start of 2026. Wage negotiations between the ACT government and teaching unions are expected to resume next month, following discussions that paused in May.

Both institutions acknowledge the competitive pressure from interstate universities and private schools. UC's recent announcement of expanded campus facilities near the Gungahlin district indicates efforts to strengthen local higher education pathways, particularly for students seeking alternatives to ANU's traditionally competitive entry requirements.

Education leaders remain cautiously optimistic, noting that while challenges are real, investment in infrastructure and workforce development demonstrates commitment to maintaining service quality. The coming months will be critical in determining whether these initiatives can adequately respond to Canberra's continued growth.

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Canberra

Covering news in Canberra. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources and was not reviewed by a human editor before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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