Karissa 'will never have the chance' to pass tough tests for HSC

By Pallavi Singhal
Updated October 6 2017 - 9:48am, first published September 6 2017 - 6:44pm
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - SEMPTEMBER 06: Student Karissa Piller and her mum Sabine Piller at NAPLAN protest at NSW Parliament on SEMPTEMBER: 6, 2017 in Sydney, Australia.  (Photo by Christopher Pearce/Fairfax Media)
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - SEMPTEMBER 06: Student Karissa Piller and her mum Sabine Piller at NAPLAN protest at NSW Parliament on SEMPTEMBER: 6, 2017 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Christopher Pearce/Fairfax Media)
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - SEMPTEMBER 06: Students protest NAPLAN at NSW Parliament on SEMPTEMBER: 6, 2017 in Sydney, Australia.  (Photo by Christopher Pearce/Fairfax Media)
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - SEMPTEMBER 06: Students protest NAPLAN at NSW Parliament on SEMPTEMBER: 6, 2017 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Christopher Pearce/Fairfax Media)

If the new policy requiring students in NSW to pass literacy and numeracy tests to be eligible for their HSC stays in place, Sabine Piller is looking at moving her family to Victoria or Queensland.

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