BERWICK STAR NEWS
Home » Cranbourne West Secondary College among Victoria’s top NAPLAN improvers

Cranbourne West Secondary College among Victoria’s top NAPLAN improvers

Cranbourne West Secondary College students have recorded exceptional growth in this year’s National Assessment Program – Literacy and Numeracy (NAPLAN), placing the school among the strongest improvers in Victoria.

The school celebrated its results on Facebook after being named one of the top four Melbourne secondary schools for NAPLAN progress in the Herald Sun, and one of 41 stand-out Victorian schools in The Age. It is the only school in the Cranbourne area to appear on both lists.

NAPLAN data shows the school’s Year 7–9 cohort lifted its average numeracy score from 523 in 2023 to 590 in 2025, an improvement of about 13 per cent in just two years. Around 79 per cent of students recorded above-average progress when compared with students who had the same starting score and similar background.

Writing achievement also strengthened, with the cohort improving from 530 to 590, an 11 per cent rise that Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA) categorises as “above” similar-background students.

Principal Rob Duncan said the school’s long-standing focus on academic growth, rather than raw results, had been central to its approach.

“We really want kids to grow. This result is our greatest measure of success because we can’t control what the kids are like when they come in at Year 7, but what we can control is what we do with them when they’re here,” he said.

“We get students of all different abilities to come to the school, as most schools do. Our main role is to actually try to grow them as much as we can in the time that we have with them.”

The principal said they were very excited and very proud of the effort that their students and staff had put in.

“We’ve worked hard to try to improve students across all the domains,” he said.

“I think students are very pleased. It’s a good acknowledgment of the effort that’s been put in by the students and also by their teachers, and their parents.

“It’s very much a team effort to try to get results like that, and to be in the top four secondary schools for growth is a real achievement.”

Mr Duncan especially wanted to point out the numeracy result.

“Our numeracy result stands out above most of the others. There’s a lot of work over a number of years that’s gone into producing that,” he said.

The school mandates five hours of mathematics or numeracy per week — above the Department requirement — and targets additional support to students who arrive in Year 7 a little behind.

We have a program that’s a small group program with probably up to six students per class who do really intensive numeracy, and they’re the ones who generally actually make the greatest growth,” Mr Duncan said.

Writing growth has also been a major focus, particularly in persuasive and creative writing.

“One of the things we really try to do with our students is to develop writing stamina, so that they can actually write for periods of time because, obviously, that’s really important when you get to the senior years of school, where you actually have to write a number of essays in three hours and your final exams and those types of things,” Mr Duncan said.

The school also achieved a 99 per cent NAPLAN participation rate this year, above the national average of 95 per cent.

“We have basically every student who can sit the test,” Mr Duncan said.

“That’s critically important because we have students who come from primary schools where they’ve never sat NAPLAN before. Maybe the parents didn’t want them to, or maybe the kids felt anxious about it.”

He said familiarising students with formal assessments was an important life skill.

“Later in life, they’re all going to want to get their driver’s licence or do other things that require testing. So, they might as well practise being tested as much as they can,” he said. “Our aim is to provide a supportive, non-threatening environment, but also an understanding that if you attend this school, it’s expected that you’ll participate.”

Mr Duncan said the school would continue to look for ways to strengthen literacy and numeracy outcomes across all year levels.

“We would love to have them all higher, but it really depends on what students are like when they enter Year 7,” he said.

“If we can keep growing students as best we can, we’ll continue to see great results when they reach Year 11 and 12.”

Cranbourne West Secondary College opened in 2021 and now has more than 1600 students.

“We have a very committed teaching team, a strong culture around learning, good routines and lots of rigour in how we teach,” Mr Duncan said.

“And we have terrific kids who have bought into that culture of wanting to learn.”

Digital Editions


More News

  • Pair arrested after allegedly fleeing Dandenong South burglary

    Pair arrested after allegedly fleeing Dandenong South burglary

    Two men allegedly fleeing from a commercial burglary in Dandenong South have been arrested by police. The pair had allegedly broken into a car-detailing business at Discovery Road just before…

  • What’s on

    What’s on

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 431626 CaseyGirlsCan Tennis at Hampton Park Free, coached beginner tennis sessions for Casey women, no prior skills or knowledge of tennis required. Follows the…

  • Police urge road safety as students head back to school

    Police urge road safety as students head back to school

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 316738 With Victorian students returning to school this week for Term 1 of 2026, Victoria Police are reminding motorists to slow down and take…

  • Ramadan Night Markets coming to Casey

    Ramadan Night Markets coming to Casey

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 467847 After a successful run in Dandenong, the Ramadan night market is now coming to Casey for two special nights in February 2026. The…

  • Landscape complete as Alderson and Bates claim Group 1’s

    Landscape complete as Alderson and Bates claim Group 1’s

    A missing piece fell into place for Cranbourne-trainer Cindy Alderson on Saturday when her seven-year-old gelding Jigsaw gave her an emotional victory in the Group 1 Railway Stakes (1200m) at…

  • Bulletproof set for home cup

    Bulletproof set for home cup

    Local trainer Scott Ewen can’t wait to test his best against some of the biggest measuring sticks in Australian harness racing when Bulletproof Boy lines up for his fifth-consecutive Cranbourne…

  • Gunmen invade Clyde North home

    Gunmen invade Clyde North home

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 531198 Police are appealing for public assistance following a frightening and violent aggravated home invasion in Clyde North last week. Two unknown men reportedly…

  • Bitey arrest following collision of alleged stolen vehicle

    Bitey arrest following collision of alleged stolen vehicle

    Victoria Police arrested two people following a crash in Hallam last Thursday on 22 January just before 7am. The alleged stolen vehicle crashed into a tree and some industrial bins…

  • Evans Road fatal collision in Cranbourne West

    Evans Road fatal collision in Cranbourne West

    Police are investigating the circumstances surrounding a fatal collision in Cranbourne West on the evening of Monday 26 January. Emergency services responded to reports of a collision between a vehicle…

  • Casey hit by heat-related power outages

    Casey hit by heat-related power outages

    Thousands of households across Casey were left without power overnight on Tuesday 27 January, after extreme heat triggered widespread faults across the Ausnet electricity network. The outages followed a day…