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This year’s theme, Together Against Loneliness, is a powerful reminder that inclusion doesn’t happen by chance… it happens through knowledge, understanding, and action.

For people with Down syndrome, loneliness is still a real and ongoing experience that is often linked to gaps in awareness, confidence, and support.

That’s where education matters.

At the NGO Training Centre, we know that quality training shapes quality support.

When staff are properly trained, they communicate better, build stronger relationships, and create environments where people feel genuinely included and not just present.

Training isn’t a checkbox.

It’s the difference between someone feeling isolated… and someone feeling like they belong.

Today, we challenge the sector to keep learning, keep improving, and keep putting people first.

Because connection starts with understanding.

People who discriminate are more likely to be those who do not hold an understanding. So to start you off, please watch this video about Down syndrome to help give you a deeper understanding:

Video link: https://www.canva.com/design/DAG-3MfeyHY/_nsu74M_uVzp7nTwJiVAdg/view?utm_content=DAG-3MfeyHY&utm_campaign=designshare&utm_medium=link&utm_source=viewer

Author: Amanda Robinson BA, MMHealthPrac,

As Head of Learning and Development and a seasoned NDIS expert, Amanda drives capability and sustainability in the disability and health sectors. With over 15 years of experience, post-graduate qualifications in Mental Health Leadership and Management, and currently pursuing an MBA, she brings deep expertise and personal insight as someone with lived experience of disability. A devoted carer, Amanda champions Human Rights, working to dismantle stigma and barriers for individuals with disability and mental health challenges. She is passionate about building robust stakeholder relationships, leveraging her advocacy, communication, strategic thinking, and analysis skills. 

Contact our friendly and supportive team

    The NGO Training Centre is a great starting point if you are looking to understand the key requirements and responsibilities of an aged care worker, or to maintain your skills and knowledge once you are qualified and in the workforce.

    Our training is all written by subject-matter experts and field auditors, and the courses will help keep your skills and knowledge fresh and up to date with changes in legislation, particularly during these reforms.

    It can fill gaps and introduce you to concepts to help close them and get you up to speed with the sector, which can be great if you are still unsure about committing to a certification that will take you anywhere from 6 to 12 months.

    Check out our popular career starter pathways below and begin your learning journey today!

    Pathway 1: Aged Care Foundations Pathway – only $338
    Aged Care Foundations Pathway for Aged Care Careers Training - NGO Training Centre

    This pathway gives you the essential knowledge about how aged care works in Australia.

    You will learn about the Strengthened Aged Care Quality Standards, how to prevent and report elder abuse, how to support people’s independence and dignity, incident reporting, mealtime safety, falls prevention, and how to respond to choking.

    These are the things every aged care worker must understand before they start work.

    Pathway 2: Aged Care Support Induction Pathway – only $338
    Aged Care Support Induction Pathway for Aged Care Careers Training - NGO Training Centre

    This pathway builds the practical, day-to-day skills of a great aged care worker.

    You will learn about person-centred care, how to write professional progress notes, how to communicate well, how to work as part of a team, how to set professional boundaries, and how to support people living with dementia.

    These are the skills that make you genuinely useful and trustworthy on the job.

    To become an Aged Care Worker, however, you will very likely (at a minimum) need to complete a qualification in individual support if you don’t already have a nursing background or Australian qualifications in the field. Aged care providers, particularly residential facilities, will request this as a minimum qualification. Some may allow you to commence employment whilst studying, usually at their own risk.

    You can complete the Certificate III in Individual Support (CHC33015) at a TAFE or a quality Registered Training Organisation (RTO). BUT… make sure you do your research, as not all training providers are created equal.

    ‘Buyer beware’ and those training providers or RTOs that seem to be too good to be true, or don’t offer support, resources or placement opportunities probably are. You can check that they are accredited and deliver nationally recognised training via the training.gov.au website. Make sure you research their validity, including checking their trainers on LinkedIn or Google. A key indicator of quality is that they sport the Nationally Recognised Training Logo and a 5-digit provider code. Another good indicator is that they provide mandated work placement support. A sign of a good RTO is that they arrange your placement for you, rather than leaving you to find your own. This process itself is very stressful for a learner and can be overwhelming when navigating an unfamiliar system.

    Sadly, there have been some dishonest online training organisations that claim their modules/units can be used as Recognised Prior Learning (RPL) towards a Certificate III in Individual Support; again, approach these with great caution. You need more than microlearning credentials to become a fully qualified aged care worker.

    Alternatively, if you are after more specialised training, you can complete a Certificate IV in Ageing Support (CHC40315). This will give you a good overview of aged care, the safety, legal and ethical protocols you need to know when working with the ageing individuals, as well as some leadership skills.

    Above this qualification, ensure that you also have up-to-date immunisations as required, and complete certifications and checks, such as a First Aid Certificate and a National Police Check. Some organisations may fund or reimburse you for completing these, so you can always check with them before applying for a position.

    With more and more regulatory requirements and a much lower risk appetite from the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission, ongoing education has never been more important to people wanting to enter the industry.

    So, please do your research and become familiar with the requirements for the field you wish to specialise in before diving in headfirst.

    The sector needs you. Start today.

    Marguerite Hoiby is a highly experienced Registered Nurse, auditor, and consultant with extensive expertise across the health, disability, and human services sectors. She brings decades of practical and governance experience in quality, compliance, and clinical practice.

    Marguerite has played a key role in developing several Aged Care and Disability courses for the NGO Training Centre, drawing on her deep knowledge of regulatory frameworks, service standards, and workforce capability requirements.

    She is an experienced auditor, assessor, and technical reviewer across multiple national frameworks, including the National Safety and Quality Health Service (NSQHS) Standards, the NDIS Practice Standards (across all modules as a Lead Auditor and Technical Reviewer), Disability Employment Services, Human Services, and Quality Management Systems ISO 9001.

    Marguerite’s clinical background spans general, paediatric, and operating theatre nursing, complemented by specialised expertise in spinal injuries and rehabilitation. She also holds postgraduate qualifications in business and educational administration, enabling her to bridge clinical practice with organisational governance, workforce development, and quality improvement.

    Her incredible work continues to support providers across aged care, disability, and health services in strengthening quality systems, meeting regulatory standards, and delivering safe, person-centred care.

    We are privileged to have Marguerite on board as our Subject Matter Expert, and we are sure you will find her course content invaluable to your organisation for both quality and compliance.

    Learn more about all our brilliant Subject Matter Experts on our About Us page.

    On International Women’s Day 2026, we celebrate progress.

    We must also confront an uncomfortable truth: not all women experience equality in the same way.

    For women with disability and women in aged care, gender inequality is compounded by ableism, ageism and systemic barriers that continue to limit autonomy, safety and voice.

    In Australia, the late Stella Young powerfully challenged society’s views on disability. She rejected narratives that reduced people to objects of inspiration and instead demanded recognition of rights, leadership and agency.

    Her advocacy remains deeply relevant today, particularly for women with disability whose voices are too often spoken about rather than listened to.

    Women with disability are disproportionately impacted by violence, underemployment and exclusion from decision-making. Older women, particularly those in residential aged care, can experience invisibility at a time when dignity, consent and autonomy matter most.

    Gender does not disappear with age. Nor does the right to self-determination.

    At the NGO Training Centre, we believe that quality workforce education is one of the most practical levers for change.

    If staff understand consent in the context of cognitive decline, they better protect autonomy.

    If leaders understand gendered violence risk factors, they respond earlier and more effectively.

    If organisations embed person-centred care and trauma-informed practice, women are safer.

    Training alone does not solve inequality. But capability shapes culture. And culture shapes outcomes.

    International Women’s Day must be more than a symbolic gesture or another tokenistic post. It must challenge the disability and aged care sectors to examine whether our systems truly uphold the rights of women, or whether convenience, compliance and outdated assumptions still influence practice.

    The standard we set in disability and aged care environments reflects what we believe about women’s worth.

    On 8 March 2026, our position is clear:

    Women with disability and ageing women deserve visibility, leadership, safety and respect.

    Not merely an aspiration, but the standard practice. And that is work we remain committed to every day.

    How are you supporting your organisation to rise above discrimination and balance the scales?

    Author: Amanda Robinson BA, MMHealthPrac,

    As Head of Learning and Development and a seasoned NDIS expert, Amanda drives capability and sustainability in the disability and health sectors. With over 15 years of experience, post-graduate qualifications in Mental Health Leadership and Management, and currently pursuing an MBA, she brings deep expertise and personal insight as someone with lived experience of disability. A devoted carer, Amanda champions Human Rights, working to dismantle stigma and barriers for individuals with disability and mental health challenges. She is passionate about building robust stakeholder relationships, leveraging her advocacy, communication, strategic thinking, and analysis skills. 

    Contact our friendly and supportive team

      Right now, in one of the most volatile climates the NDIS has ever seen, we’re watching something alarming.

      Plans are being cut.

      Costs are rising.

      Participants are being removed from the scheme.

      Funding is tightening.

      Last week, a carer contacted me after the NDIS declined funding for an air-conditioner filter for her partner’s approved medical cooling unit. The case is now at the tribunal, costing the government thousands in lawyers and causing years of unnecessary stress.

      How much is the filter? Around $250.

      The risk to the participant?

      Priceless.

      And yet somehow, training providers are popping up overnight like it’s a gold rush. Outsourced from offshore individuals claiming to be organisations using AI as a weapon, not a tool, just to make money. It’s not Eureka; it’s downright dangerous.

      That should concern every credible disability and aged care provider in this country because, whilst revenue is shrinking, risk is rising.

      Providers are now supporting more complex participants with fewer resources. Margins are thinner. Scrutiny is higher. The NDIS Quality and Safeguards and Aged Care Commission are watching closely. Families are watching even closer.

      And yet some organisations are still choosing the cheapest training option they can find.

      Let’s be blunt: not all training is created equal.

      If the training you purchase is not aligned to the NDIS Practice Standards, if it is not compliant, if it is not created by genuine subject matter experts who understand restrictive practices, high-risk behaviours, mental health complexities and duty of care, then you are not building capability.

      You are building liability.

      As a disability advocate, I’ve seen providers send undertrained staff into high-risk environments with nothing more than a rushed induction and a PDF.

      I’ve seen ‘training’ delivered by friends, people with no formal expertise, or by people with no training at all. I’ve seen staff taught incorrect practices that escalate behaviours rather than support regulation and safety.

      And I have seen the consequences.

      When staff are inadequately trained, participants are placed at risk. Families lose trust. Organisations unravel, and sometimes, the cost is devastatingly permanent.

      This is not just about compliance paperwork. It’s about safeguarding human lives.

      So, here’s the decision every provider must make:

      Do you choose the cheapest training because budgets are tight?

      Or, do you choose a training provider with a proven track record in the sector, highly qualified subject matter experts who audit NDIS and Aged Care organisations in Australia, real instructional designers, a deep knowledge of the Commission’s requirements, and a history of standing behind their work?

      Because cutting corners on training will not protect your bottom line.

      It will expose it, and the only corner you will feature on is Four Corners.

      In today’s climate, you do not want to be the next provider facing sanctions, investigations, or worse, the subject of a national exposé. If you own or lead an organisation, invest in training the same way you would invest in your governance, insurance, and safeguarding systems.

      Smart providers know that training is not a cost centre.

      It is risk management.

      It is an ethical responsibility.

      And in the NDIS environment of 2026;

      It is survival.

      Choose accordingly.

      Author: Amanda Robinson BA, MMHealthPrac,

      As Head of Learning and Development and a seasoned NDIS expert, Amanda drives capability and sustainability in the disability and health sectors. With over 15 years of experience, post-graduate qualifications in Mental Health Leadership and Management, and currently pursuing an MBA, she brings deep expertise and personal insight as someone with lived experience of disability. A devoted carer, Amanda champions Human Rights, working to dismantle stigma and barriers for individuals with disability and mental health challenges. She is passionate about building robust stakeholder relationships, leveraging her advocacy, communication, strategic thinking, and analysis skills. 

      Contact our friendly and supportive team

        International Wheelchair Day is a global day to celebrate the positive impact wheelchairs have on the lives of millions of people worldwide and to recognise the importance of accessibility, inclusion, and choice.

        At NGO Training Centre, we acknowledge that use of a wheelchair is not a limitation, it is a tool of independence, mobility, participation and identity.

        Today is an opportunity to:

        • Celebrate the achievements and contributions of people who use wheelchairs
        • Promote inclusive communities and accessible environments
        • Challenge stigma and outdated assumptions, and
        • Reflect on how we can strengthen inclusive practice across aged care, disability and community services.

        For organisations working within the NDIS and aged care sectors, International Wheelchair Day is also a reminder of our responsibility to:

        • Support individual’s choice and control
        • Ensure environments are physically accessible
        • Promote dignity, respect and rights, and
        • Listen to lived experience.

        REAL inclusion goes beyond ramps and doorways.

        It’s about attitudes, language, service design and meaningful engagement.

        As the best training provider in Australia, we support disability and aged care professionals across Australia and remain committed to building workforce capability that centres on lived experience, human rights, and practical inclusion.

        Because accessibility is not a feature, it’s a right.

        Author: Amanda Robinson BA, MMHealthPrac,

        As Head of Learning and Development and a seasoned NDIS expert, Amanda drives capability and sustainability in the disability and health sectors. With over 15 years of experience, post-graduate qualifications in Mental Health Leadership and Management, and currently pursuing an MBA, she brings deep expertise and personal insight as someone with lived experience of disability. A devoted carer, Amanda champions Human Rights, working to dismantle stigma and barriers for individuals with disability and mental health challenges. She is passionate about building robust stakeholder relationships, leveraging her advocacy, communication, strategic thinking, and analysis skills. 

        Contact our friendly and supportive team

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