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Queensland education minister ‘very unhappy’ about botched history exam preparation

Joe Hinchliffe

Joe Hinchliffe

Queensland’s education minister has said the 140 high school students across the state who spent their final weeks in high school preparing for an exam on the wrong Caesar will not be asked for what they have not prepared.

But John-Paul Langbroek could not say what their final exam, worth 25% of their course mark and due to be sat this afternoon, would look like.

“The exam that they are doing … is something we’ll be resolving into the future,” Langbroek said in response to a question from the press.

But I can’t see how anyone would be expected to do an exam, having had two days’ preparation.

The minister said that the 75% of the course mark for which the students had already been tested would be “scaled up” to make sure they were not disadvantaged and that it was his “presumption” that if someone had perfect marks to date: “I’d suspect they’d get as close to 100.”

Langbroek said he wanted affected students to know “it was not the end of the world” but that he was “very unhappy” about the stress they had been put through.

For all of us as parents, or students who have been through situations like this, it would be extremely traumatic and I want to reassure those students and their parents and their teachers affected that we will be making every investigation into how this happened.

The schools affected are both state and private and range from Cairns to Brisbane. They are: Brisbane State High School, Flagstone Community College, Meridan State College, Redcliffe State High School, Yeronga State High School, St Teresa’s Catholic College, West Moreton Anglican College, James Nash State High School and Kuranda District State College.

The Queensland education minister, John-Paul Langbroek.
The Queensland education minister, John-Paul Langbroek. Photograph: Darren England/AAP
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Nathalie May Matthews, 38, applied for a private AVO against the one-time federal Labor opposition leader after accusing him of years of manipulation and sustained abuse.

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He withdrew an application for an interim AVO, which, if granted, would have lasted until the matter returned to court for a three-day hearing in May 2026.

– AAP

Mark Latham. Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP
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