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Student–Teacher Ratio Calculator

Student to teacher ratio and required staff numbers from enrolment. References ACECQA/state guidelines. Free teaching calculator for student–teacher ratio. AU and...

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The principal needs a one-page summary for the board meeting showing how the school's ratio compares to the national average and OECD benchmark. Before the meeting starts you need the numbers calculated from the FTE headcount.

Student–Teacher Ratio Calculator
Classroom
Full-time equivalents
Ratio = Students ÷ Teacher FTEs Australian national averages (ACARA 2023):
Government primary: ~15:1 · Government secondary: ~12:1 · Catholic schools: ~12:1 · Independent: ~10:1
OECD average: 15:1 (primary) · 13:1 (secondary). Lower ratios generally correlate with better student outcomes.
ℹ️ Results are estimates for planning purposes. Verify with current standards and a qualified professional.

1 What this calculator does

Calculates student-to-teacher ratio from total student enrolments and full-time equivalent (FTE) teachers. Compares the result to Australian national average ratios and OECD benchmarks by school type. Flags whether the ratio is below, at or above the national average.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Student-teacher ratio = Total students / FTE teachers AU national averages (approx 2024): Primary: 15:1 | Secondary: 12:1 | Combined K-12: 13.5:1 | Early childhood: 10:1 OECD averages: Primary ~15:1 | Secondary ~13:1

Student-teacher ratio (STR) is calculated using FTE teachers rather than headcount -- a teacher working 0.6 FTE counts as 0.6 in the denominator. This is the standard used for government and OECD reporting. Lower ratios indicate better teacher availability per student. The AU national average for primary schools is approximately 15:1 and for secondary schools is 12:1 (Schools Statistics 2023), with the OECD average at 15:1 for primary and 13:1 for secondary.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Primary school FTE calculation
Given: Students: 420 | FTE teachers: 24 | School type: primary
Working: Ratio: 420 / 24 = 17.5:1 | AU primary average: 15:1 | Above average by 2.5
Answer: 17.5:1 -- Slightly above national average (15:1)
💡 17.5:1 is within one standard deviation of the national average but slightly above. This would be noted as 'slightly above average' rather than critically under-resourced in a board report.
Standard
Secondary school with part-time staff
Given: Students: 1,180 | FTE teachers: 10 full-time + 8 x 0.5 FTE = 14 total FTE | Type: secondary
Working: Ratio: 1,180 / 14 = 84.3 | Wait -- should be 1,180/98=12.0 | Let's correct: 1,180/(10+8x0.5) | 10+(8x0.5) = 14 FTE | 1,180/14
Answer: Ratio: 84.3:1 -- input error -- verify: if 14 FTE total, 1,180/14 = 84:1 seems very high for a typical school. Recheck if 98 teachers total: 1,180/98=12.0:1
💡 This example illustrates the importance of correctly counting FTE. If the school has 1,180 students and 14 FTE (all part-time), ratio is very high. If 98 FTE, ratio is 12:1 -- at the secondary average.
Advanced
Comparing two campuses for equity report
Given: Campus A: 650 students, 38 FTE | Campus B: 820 students, 42 FTE | Type: combined K-12
Working: Campus A: 650/38 = 17.1:1 | Campus B: 820/42 = 19.5:1 | AU combined average: 13.5:1 | Both above average
Answer: Campus A: 17.1:1 | Campus B: 19.5:1 | Both above AU average of 13.5:1
💡 Campus B has a significantly higher ratio -- an equity concern worth noting in a system report. 19.5:1 is 44% above the national average for a combined school.

4 Sanity check

AU national average STR 2023 (approx)
Primary 15:1 | Secondary 12:1 | Combined K-12 13.5:1 | Early childhood 10:1
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, Schools Australia.
OECD average STR (Education at a Glance)
Primary ~15:1 | Secondary ~13:1
Australia is close to OECD averages for secondary and slightly above for primary.
Use FTE not headcount
A 0.8 FTE teacher counts as 0.8, not 1.0
Using headcount rather than FTE understates the true ratio and makes it appear better than it is.
STR vs class size
STR includes specialist teachers, library staff, counsellors and support staff who are counted in the FTE denominator | Class sizes are typically larger than the STR suggests

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Using teacher headcount instead of FTE Counting part-time staff as one teacher each FTE denominator inflated -- ratio appears lower (better) than it actually is Convert all part-time staff to FTE. A 0.5 FTE teacher counts as 0.5 in the denominator. Add all FTE values, including fractions, before dividing into student enrolment.
Including non-teaching staff in the teacher FTE count Counting school counsellors, admin staff, integration aides in the teacher total Ratio appears much lower than the actual teaching capacity Include only qualified teachers delivering classroom instruction in the teacher FTE. Support staff, integration aides and admin staff are typically excluded from the teacher FTE for STR reporting purposes.
Comparing STR to class size benchmarks Confusing student-teacher ratio with class size Misleading conclusions -- STR of 15:1 does not mean class sizes of 15 Class sizes are determined by how teachers are deployed to classes. The STR includes specialist, part-time and support teachers who may not be in a classroom at any given time. Class size is a separate, typically larger, measure.
Not specifying school type in the comparison Comparing primary school ratio to secondary average School appears much better or worse resourced than it actually is relative to peers Always compare the ratio to the appropriate benchmark for the school type. Primary and secondary averages differ significantly.