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Using school records to research your family history

School records can give you rare insights into your relatives’ childhoods and family life.

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Unlike most records, school records follow children across many years of their lives. This makes them one of the only records that can show a person’s whole childhood.

Depending on the type of record, you can find useful information about your family members, including:

If you’re building a family story, school records can add rich detail about everyday life including glimpses of who your relatives were as children and what their world looked like.

Types of school records for family history research

There are many school records that can be helpful when searching your family history.

For detailed examples, see Case studies: how school records can help.

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Enrolment records have information about:

Learn more about student enrolment records.

School photographs can include:

School yearbooks (or magazines) can contain:

School histories can include extra information that provides ‘colour’ to the story of a family member’s school.

Such histories may be informal or unpublished, or produced by a professional historian for a formal publication.

School councils are groups that set the broad direction and vision of a school within the school’s community. They usually have between 6 and 15 members, including:

Minutes of school council meetings can give insights into the culture of a school, include mention of major events and names of Council office bearers.

Learn more about school councils and how schools are governed.

Teacher record books, created from 1863 to 1959, contain the names of thousands of teachers and the schools they worked at. The Public Record Office Victoria (PROV) have digitised these books and you can access them online at the PROV website.

Learn more about school staff employment records.

From the 1850s to 1982, school District Inspectors wrote reports about Victorian government schools.

Their role and the contents of their reports changed over time, and involved:

Learn more about the role of School District Inspectors.

School policies are directives that apply to individual schools and provide rules for the school community to follow.

School policies can set rules about:

Parents and friends clubs and groups, known as mothers clubs prior to the 1970s, were key to gathering financial and other support from the local community.

The minutes of meetings of these groups include information on fundraising efforts and maintenance ‘working bees’. These records can illustrate the issues and activities that the school community focussed on.

Learn more about the role of mothers clubs in Victorian public education.

Corporal punishment was allowed in government schools until 1983. Its use was governed by certain protocols.

The teacher inflicting corporal punishment had to record it in a corporal punishment book. The record had to include the name of the student and punishment they received. These books are rare but, when they do exist, they can offer insights into school discipline in the past.

The Public Record Office Victoria has a list of records created by the department that deal with school matters. These include:

Finding school records

For more information on finding records please see Get school records.

If you know the name of the school you are looking for you can search for it directly at the Victorian Government Schools Directory.

For detailed examples of how to look up records, see Case studies: how school records can help.

Education & training

Updated 27 March 2026



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