How the Education Standards work
In each Part, the Education Standards set out:
- Rights
- Obligations
- Measures of Compliance
These three areas aim to ensure that students with disability can participate equally in education and training courses.
Rights
These are the basic entitlements that a student with disability can expect from an education provider. The most basic right is that a student with disability has the opportunity to participate in education on the same basis as students without disability.
Obligations
These are the things that education providers must do to respect the rights of students with disability. For example, an education provider must make sure that students with disability can apply to enrol to a course. This may mean that they have to take reasonable steps to make sure students with disability can access all the information about the course and how to enrol.
Obligations in the Education Standards are legal requirements and disobeying them is against the law, unless an Exception applies.
Measures of compliance
Measures for Compliance are examples of what education providers can do to make sure that they have carried out their obligations. For example, providing all important class materials in different formats - like Braille, audio or electronic formats. These are measures to show the education provider is assisting its students with disability to participate in education on the same basis as other students.
Measures for compliance are not the same as Obligations. They are not legal requirements and failing to carry them out doesn't always mean its against the law. If an education provider can carry out their obligations in a different way, then that is not against the law. For example, instead of having information about enrolment in different formats, an education provider instead could provide a specific staff member to assist students with disability through the enrolment process.
