Many rural Australian towns are struggling with drug addiction, disadvantage and unemployment. This one is no different.
The easiest option for Denah would have been to drop out of school.
She was already only attending classes about 20 per cent of the time, “wagging” the rest.
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Her parents finished their schooling in Year 8 and 9, so there was no pressure from them to keep going.
But – after tiptoeing along the brink of dropping out for some time – the 17-year-old committed to being the first in her family to finish Year 12.
And her story of disengagement with education is not uncommon in the regional Victorian city of Shepparton, located 180km north-east of Melbourne.
The city of less than 50,000 inhabitants is struggling under the weight of high rates of unemployment, school drop-out and teen pregnancies.
These issues, as well as rampant drug use (especially abuse of the drug ice), the struggling local agricultural industry and racism were discussed amongst locals at Goulburn Valley Hotel pub for SBS’s Insight program, which aired last night.
Statistics show that around 45 per cent of young people in Shepparton are not fully engaged in work or school.
Local youths said they had been unsuccessfully searching for work for up to three years, with one young woman saying she had never even had a job interview.
The number of Shepparton residents going to university, or continuing on at school past Year 10, is a lot lower than the state average.