NZEI News and Media Releases for Worksite Reps
News
Thursday - February 2nd 2012
Education should not be a government cash cow
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says education should not be used as a cash cow and the government would be mad to accept Treasury's latest advice. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says education should not be used as a cash cow and the government would be mad to accept Treasury's latest advice.
In its briefing to the incoming government Treasury has suggested radical reform to free up money, including increasing class sizes and student-teacher ratios and closing down schools.
"This type of reform would be a huge step backwards for our education system and I don't think schools, parents or communities would be willing to accept it. It is ill-advised advice," says NZEI President Ian Leckie.
"Parents and schools fought long and hard to lower class sizes and student ratios in recent years particularly in the junior classes, and they would not want to see all that good work undone."
"It's disappointing to hear the Finance Minister say class size doesn't matter when parents and teachers, who see what happens in classrooms everyday, know that children get more out of teaching and learning when they are in smaller groups and can get more one-on-one attention".
"Having bigger classes would also do nothing to improve teacher quality," he says.
Closing down schools would hit communities hard, particularly if there was no educational benefit in doing so.
"Closing a school down impacts heavily on students and families and shouldn't affect a child's right to attend their local school. Treasury's proposal is purely a money-making scheme for a wholesale sell-off of valuable school property and land which would come at the expense of local communities," Mr Leckie says.
"Surely education should not be a cash-cow for the government. If Treasury really wanted to free up money in education and improve teacher quality it would reinstate the teacher professional development that the government has taken away and stop wasting tens of millions of dollars on National Standards".
NZEI says worryingly the Ministry of Education's briefing to the new Minister also signals school closures as well as the erosion of school board control over property. << less
Wednesday - February 1st 2012
Disappointing comments from the Education Minister on official online league tables
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is calling on the new Education Minister to guarantee the Government's decision to establish official league tables of secondary schools will not be extended to primary schools. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is calling on the new Education Minister to guarantee the Government's decision to establish official league tables of secondary schools will not be extended to primary schools.
When then-Minister Anne Tolley introduced controversial National Standards into primary schools in 2010, she pledged that the Government would not publish league tables.
Following a visit to Australia, the new Minister Hekia Parata has said the government is considering establishing a new website to compare the performance of secondary schools and she is open to parents being able to rate the performance of schools and teachers.
"That’s a very different position and is disappointing given Anne Tolley's earlier comments," says NZEI President Ian Leckie. "International experience shows that league tables unfairly and inaccurately label children, schools and their communities and do nothing to improve student achievement. We would sincerely hope and want guarantees that there are no such plans to extend such a system to primary schools - certainly not one which is based on unreliable National Standards information".
Secondary school NCEA results are nationally moderated and parents and schools have a clearer understanding of what they mean.
"The issue for primary schools is that National Standards aren't moderated and there is huge variation in the way schools are implementing them. It would be a case of junk information in and junk information out. Officially publishing that information on a government-sponsored website would be misleading for parents and potentially damaging for school communities."
"Schools want to be held accountable but that accountability cannot be based on a measure which is neither fair nor accurate, and is very narrowly focused."
NZEI would welcome the opportunity to meet with Ms Parata to outline its concerns and seek guarantees that student achievement data based on National Standards will not end up on an official website aimed at comparing school performance. << less
Wednesday - February 1st 2012
Government stacks the charter school deck while public kept in the dark
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says the government is stacking the charter school deck while keeping the public in the dark about how charter schools will work in New Zealand and how they will actually make a difference to student achievement. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says the government is stacking the charter school deck while keeping the public in the dark about how charter schools will work in New Zealand and how they will actually make a difference to student achievement.
The Associate Education Minister and sole ACT MP John Banks has said the first charter school will be up and running in south Auckland by the end of the first school term and he has appointed former ACT Party President Catherine Isaacs to oversee the charter school implementation group.
"Once again we are seeing a total lack of transparency in this whole process and an agenda driven by politics and business rather than education and children," says NZEI President Ian Leckie.
"Firstly the government and ACT completely blindsided the public by announcing charter schools as part of their coalition deal, and now it is moving to unfairly stack the deck of the committee set up to establish them."
"The charter school agenda was clearly more advanced than the government cares to admit," he says.
Despite the speed at which the government is moving on charter schools, the public and communities where these schools will be established, have seen absolutely no details on how they will be set up and run.
"We are not being told why and how these schools will make a difference to underachieving kids. Exactly what will a charter school do that is different and how does giving taxpayer money to business to run a school improve student achievement? These are all questions the government is failing to give New Zealander the answers to," says Mr Leckie.
New Zealand students and schools do better than those in any of the countries where charter schools have been established. The balance of overseas experience shows that charter schools do nothing to raise educational achievement and can take money away from existing schools and undermine communities.
NZEI believes the children who are missing out on educational success the most are facing the combined hurdles of poor health, bad housing, troubled families and poverty. These aren't problems schools can fix on their own, and they certainly aren't problems that charter schools can fix.
NZEI continues to call for any move to establish charter schools to go through a parliamentary select committee process so the public and educators can make submissions and see the issues fairly debated. << less
Monday - January 30th 2012
Threat of league tables hangs over the start to the school year
With the new school year about to begin, the education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is repeating its call for the government to move to protect centralised 'National Standards' information from being drawn up into damaging league tables. more >>
With the new school year about to begin, the education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is repeating its call for the government to move to protect centralised 'National Standards' information from being drawn up into damaging league tables.
All schools must submit their student achievement data based on 'National Standards' to the Education Ministry by 31 May.
NZEI says schools are deeply concerned that the information will be made public and aggregated into crude league tables that will unfairly label students, schools and their communities.
"It’s a top-of-mind issue and worry for principals, teachers and school as we go into the 2012 school year," says NZEI President Ian Leckie.
"They know that 'National Standards' data is inconsistent and that each school is interpreting the Standards differently. Aggregating that data into national or local league tables that give the impression of ranking school effectiveness would be unfair".
"The public should not be duped into thinking the effectiveness of schools can be judged on such inconsistent and flawed assessment which cannot properly reflect a student's learning or progress".
"Any National Standards-based league table will simply reflect school decile and serve to name and shame some of the very schools which are working the hardest to raise student achievement," Mr Leckie says.
NZEI believes that school and teacher accountability is essential and parents have a right to know that their children are engaged in high quality, effective teaching and learning programmes.
However Mr Leckie says the danger is 'National Standards' will increasingly become a blunt driver of the government's accountability agenda.
"That puts our education system at the mercy of junk information. It will also create unhealthy competition between schools, the likely massaging of student achievement information and a teaching to the test approach. Is this really what we want for our world-leading education system and our children?"
NZEI says schools want an assurance that centralised 'National Standards' information will be protected, otherwise the government will find that come 31 May, schools will be reluctant to hand their student achievement data over. << less
Friday - January 27th 2012
Urgent action required to support early childhood education in Christchurch East
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is calling on the government to act urgently to help support families and struggling early childhood services in quake-affected areas of Christchurch. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is calling on the government to act urgently to help support families and struggling early childhood services in quake-affected areas of Christchurch.
A just-released report to the Ministry of Education on the impact of the quakes on early childhood education in Christchurch East, shows enrolments are well down and participation rates, particularly among Māori and Pasifika children, have dropped significantly.
It makes a raft of recommendations to help support and encourage attendance in the area. It says services should be able to offer some flexibility to families without financial loss, staff should be able to spend more time with affected and transitioning families, enrolments and population shifts should be carefully monitored, crown land could be made available for damaged centres to relocate, and the benefits of early childhood participation should be promoted in the community.
"It is great to see early childhood education in Christchurch finally getting some attention and priority," says NZEI National Executive member Hayley Whitaker.
Since last year's February quake early childhood services, particularly community-based centres, have been facing huge financial difficulties. A survey last year showed 16 of the 18 ECE centres in quake-affected parts of the city experienced at least $700,000 in funding cuts due to roll drops. Those funding drops have meant job losses or pay cuts for staff and have seen centres reducing operating hours or facing closure.
Hayley Whitaker says last year the government repeatedly ignored calls from NZEI and early childhood centres to guarantee pre-quake funding levels throughout the year to help give them some certainty.
"It's critical for Christchurch's children and families that ECE centres have enough funding and support going into the future. ECE centres play a big part in building and keeping community networks together and that's important in areas where communities have been damaged or dislocated."
"The situation is urgent and the Ministry needs to act on some of the positive recommendations in this report. It's vital that children can participate in early childhood education and everything must be done to make that as easy as possible for the families in and communities of east Christchurch," Ms Whitaker says. << less
Thursday - January 19th 2012
Government urged to take note of damning Australian childcare study
The education sector union says the government should take note of an Australian study which proves qualified teachers play a critical role in providing quality early childhood education. more >>
The education sector union says the government should take note of an Australian study which proves qualified teachers play a critical role in providing quality early childhood education.
The E4Kids study which is the Australia's first long-term investigation into the quality of pre-schools and childcare, has found that the standard of teaching in Australian preschools is very poor and many children are attending little more than a glorified playgroup.
In almost all Australian states there is no legislative or regulatory requirement to employ a qualified teacher in an early childhood centre, although a range of new minimum qualification requirements has just been introduced.
NZEI National Executive member Hayley Whitaker says the study proves the correlation between poor standards and low numbers of qualified early childhood teachers.
"We know that fully qualified teachers are what drive high standards and establish effective learning environments. New Zealand is well ahead of where Australia is but the danger is that recent government policy is undermining that and taking us backwards," she says.
During the National-led government’s first term in office it axed the 100% fully qualified teacher target, slashed funding to services which have more than 80% qualified staff, cut grants supporting newly qualified teachers to get full registration and withdrawn professional development funding.
It also scrapped planned improvements to teacher ratios for two year olds and changed licensing rules which means services can now have up to 150 children in a centre.
"Much of the progress we have made is being eroded and we don’t want to be back in the position where Australia now finds itself. Quality is not something which should be compromised at the most important learning stage of children’s lives," Ms Whitaker says. << less
Friday - December 23rd 2011
No appetite for charter schools in south Auckland
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says contrary to claims by the Education Minister, principals in south Auckland have no appetite for charter schools. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says contrary to claims by the Education Minister, principals in south Auckland have no appetite for charter schools.
Hekia Parata has said that principals and parents are queuing up for the first charter school, and that there is very high demand.
NZEI has spoken to 87 principals in south Auckland. The vast majority have said they are either concerned or very concerned about the prospect of charter schools, while only four said they could see some benefit.
NZEI President Ian Leckie says they are concerned on a number of fronts.
"Firstly they are suspicious about the government's privatisation agenda for education, secondly they believe charter schools are unmandated coalition policy, and thirdly they feel that low decile communities are being unfairly targeted by government claims that charter schools are needed in areas where underachievement is entrenched."
"Some of these schools work harder than any others in the country to raise student achievement and there is no recognition of the effective programmes they already have in place. The problems of underachievement are complex and principals in south Auckland know that charter schools will do nothing to fix them".
Mr Leckie says it's important to remember that the people of south Auckland did not vote for charter schools and have not been asked whether they want to hand over their children's education to private business where there is limited accountability.
NZEI says there is clearly a disconnect between what the Minister is saying and what people and educators in south Auckland are feeling.
"Perhaps the Minister should release some more details about exactly what these schools will look like and talk to those communities which will be affected by what represents a major shift change to the foundations of our public education system," says Mr Leckie. << less
Thursday - December 22nd 2011
Government rushing full speed ahead on charter schools
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is disappointed by comments from the new Education Minister which show the government is rushing full speed ahead with charter schools. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is disappointed by comments from the new Education Minister which show the government is rushing full speed ahead with charter schools.
Hekia Parata has reportedly said today that there is a great deal of interest in charter schools in south Auckland and some educators are already putting their hands up to run them.
"The speed at which the government is moving on what is completely unmandated coalition policy is worrying," says NZEI President Ian Leckie.
"It's important to remember that the people of south Auckland did not vote for charter schools and have not been asked whether they want to hand over their children's education to private business where there is limited accountability."
"Our students and schools do better than those in any of the countries where charter schools have been established. Overseas experience shows that charter schools do nothing to raise educational achievement and can take money away from existing schools and undermine communities".
NZEI believes the children who are missing out on educational success the most are facing the combined hurdles of poor health, bad housing, troubled families and poverty. These aren’t problems schools can fix on their own, and they certainly aren't problems that charter schools can fix.
Mr Leckie says "the government needs to pull back and listen to the public concern being expressed about charter schools and front up with some real answers as to why New Zealand needs them before giving any business or company the green light".
NZEI is also calling for any move to establish charter schools to go through proper parliamentary processes so the public at least has a chance to make submissions and have the issues debated. << less
Monday - December 19th 2011
Government needs to come clean on principal plans
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is urging the government to come clean about its agenda for education and any plans it may have to change the way school principals are hired. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is urging the government to come clean about its agenda for education and any plans it may have to change the way school principals are hired.
Media reports suggest that the government is planning to make the Ministry of Education responsible for the appointment of principals rather than boards, and also ban them from speaking out against government policy.
NZEI President Ian Leckie says the suggestions are alarming and need to be honestly confirmed or denied.
"There have been a lot of rumours and speculation about the issue and principals and schools are understandably very anxious. Removing the ability of schools and their communities to hire their own principal strikes at the heart of Tomorrow's Schools and you have to wonder how much further the government is willing to go".
"There's also the question of motive," says Mr Leckie.
"Handing over the employment of principals directly to the Ministry and attempting to gag them is a likely response to principals' widespread criticism of National Standards".
NZEI says like charter schools, the government seems like its readying to push through more unmandated educational change and policy.
"Changing the way principals are hired and managed would represent a major shift to our quality education system. It would be completely wrong and would be met with opposition from principals, schools and communities. It would also get the new Education Minister off to a very bad start with the sector as a whole," says Mr Leckie.
"The government needs to front up and be honest about what's on its agenda for education and put an end to the climate of suspicion and mistrust that it is fostering". << less
Monday - December 12nd 2011
NZEI hopes to be able to forge constructive working relationship with new minister
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is hoping there will be opportunities to forge a strong and constructive working relationship with the new Education Minister. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is hoping there will be opportunities to forge a strong and constructive working relationship with the new Education Minister.
In the new cabinet line-up Hekia Parata takes over the education portfolio from Anne Tolley.
NZEI which represents more than 50,000 teachers, principals and education workers acknowledges that the past three years have been challenging.
NZEI President Ian Leckie says "we have seen a lot of policy and measures introduced such as National Standards and cuts to early childhood funding, which have definitely put a strain on the relationship between educational professionals and the government".
"We have a great education system which we want to see made into a truly excellent one. To do that there must be a healthy and respectful relationship between the education sector and government".
NZEI believes there are many challenges ahead.
"Charter schools, fundamental problems with National Standards, raising Māori student achievement, the government's failure to commit to 100% qualified early childhood teachers, the future of education in Christchurch, more support for special needs students and recognising the professional work and value of school support staff are all issues which deserve full and open discussion," says Mr Leckie.
NZEI hopes the new minister will take on these challenges with an inclusive and constructive approach which values the voice of teachers, principals and communities.
It also wishes Anne Tolley well in her newly-appointed roles. << less
Tuesday - December 6th 2011
Charter schools should be subject to full parliamentary scrutiny
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says the government should not be allowed to push any legislation on charter schools through parliament, without a proper select committee process. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says the government should not be allowed to push any legislation on charter schools through parliament, without a proper select committee process.
The government is allowing charter schools to be set up under its coalition deal with ACT, saying they will be trialed in south Auckland and Christchurch. The policy was not flagged by either party in the lead up to the election.
NZEI believes legislation will be needed around the funding and governance of charter schools as they represent a fundamental change to the spirit of the Education Act and the Tomorrow’s Schools philosophy of communities running their own schools.
NZEI President Ian Leckie says while the government clearly had detailed policy around charter schools ready to go, the public has been completely blindsided.
"Given that, it is only fair that the any moves to establish charter schools go through proper parliamentary processes so the public at least has a chance to make submissions and have the issues debated".
"Charter schools represent a major shift in direction for New Zealand education and the government must not be allowed to simply pass legislation through the House under urgency, claiming it has a mandate to do so," he says.
NZEI believes that if a select committee was to consider charter schools, it should sit in Christchurch and south Auckland, to hear directly from residents as to whether they want charter schools driving a wedge through their communities.
"There are some very big question around why New Zealand needs charter schools and why the government is so intent on pushing them. If the government and ACT are so wedded to the idea of charter schools, perhaps they should trial them in Epsom," Mr Leckie says. << less
Monday - December 5th 2011
ACT used as a Trojan horse to push through unmandated education policy
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says the government has used the ACT Party as a Trojan horse in introducing charter schools to New Zealand. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says the government has used the ACT Party as a Trojan horse in introducing charter schools to New Zealand.
Under the National/Act coalition agreement, the government has committed to embarking on a charter schools programme, which will see alternative education providers competing with existing schools for students and funding.
NZEI says the public needs to question why New Zealand needs charter schools and why the policy was never flagged in the lead up to the election.
NZEI President Ian Leckie says "it is astounding that this sort of policy, which has the potential to change the face of New Zealand's education system, is being arrogantly pushed through and given priority, without the public having a say on the matter".
"We need to be asking why we want public money going into privately-run charter schools when there is no evidence they will add any value or benefit New Zealand’s education system or local communities".
Overseas experience shows they can take students and money away from existing schools, undermine communities and increase social segregation. They are also less accountable and there is no proof that they are effective in raising educational standards or achievement levels.
Ian Leckie says the introduction of charter schools is a step towards the privatisation of education for which the government has no mandate.
"I think New Zealanders should be very concerned that the ACT Party, which received less than 1% of the vote, is suddenly shaping and dictating key education policy. The government clearly had charter schools sitting on its agenda and is using ACT to do its bidding". << less
Wednesday - November 30th 2011
Kindergarten teachers to vote on whether to accept or reject final pay offer
Thousands of kindergarten teachers will be attending paid union meetings over the next week to vote on whether to accept a final pay offer or take industrial action. Negotiations have been going on for much of the year. more >>
Thousands of kindergarten teachers will be attending paid union meetings over the next week to vote on whether to accept a final pay offer or take industrial action.
Negotiations have been going on for much of the year.
The union representing kindergarten teachers, NZEI Te Riu Roa, says under the offer pay parity would be maintained but the Ministry of Education and kindergarten employers want to take away two hours of non-contact release time for teachers in sessional kindergartens.
NZEI spokesperson and lead negotiator Hayley Whitaker says that release time is essential in supporting teaching and learning and in the day-to-day management of kindergartens.
Earlier this year kindergarten teachers filled in professional time registers which were sent to the Minister of Education to highlight the sort of essential work that gets done during two hours of non-contact time.
"What came through is that teachers use their release time in a variety of valuable ways such as planning, record-keeping, administration, parent follow-ups, liaising with special education staff or other agencies, managing rolls, and displaying children’s learning," says Ms Whitaker.
Kindergarten teachers will be asked at the paid union meetings to vote on whether to accept and ratify a proposed settlement or take industrial action.
NZEI says it's very important that teachers exercise their legal right to attend a paid union meeting so that the vote is endorsed by a clear and strong majority.
The meetings are taking place in different parts of the country between 1-7 December. << less
Friday - November 25th 2011
Moerewa at sharp end of punitive approach to National Standards
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says Moerewa School in Northland is at the sharp end of the government's punitive approach to National Standards. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says Moerewa School in Northland is at the sharp end of the government's punitive approach to National Standards.
The community is rallying behind the school to fight a decision by the Education Minister to close its senior secondary class, despite its students' stunning NCEA results.
Moerewa School and its principal have been strong critics of National Standards and are not implementing them because they don’t believe they will do anything to raise the achievement of Māori students.
NZEI immediate past-President Frances Nelson says "the government says it wants to raise the tail of underachievement and Māori achievement. Moerewa School is doing that, and doing it very effectively. The government should not turn around and punish them for that".
"What is happening at Moerewa is the sharp end of the government's punitive approach to National Standards. That approach is being used against schools which are already performing well and making a real difference in lifting student outcomes."
Moerewa School clearly has the confidence of its community and NZEI believes the government should listen to that as a matter of urgency.
"The government should not ignore the resolve of communities such as Moerewa, in standing up for their children’s education. What we're seeing in Moerewa will be repeated in communities around the country if the government continues to pursue flawed policy and enforce it with unreasonable action," Ms Nelson says. << less
Thursday - November 24th 2011
Schools won’t want students dragging down "National Standards" results
The education sector union NZEI TE Riu Roa says the parents of special needs students should be concerned that schools will now be required to report their children’s achievement against "National Standards". more >>
The education sector union NZEI TE Riu Roa says the parents of special needs students should be concerned that schools will now be required to report their children’s achievement against "National Standards".
The Ministry of Education has changed its advice to schools and says achievement information for special needs students must be included in their "National Standards" reporting. That means schools will be required to measure the number and proportion of all students as above, at, below or well below “National Standards".
NZEI says not only does that raise serious privacy issues but it could result in schools excluding special needs children if "National Standards" information is used to publish school league tables.
Students with special needs are more likely to sit in the 'below' or 'well below' categories for their age.
"The result of that will be that in smaller schools, or schools which have a special needs unit, those children will be easily identifiable in terms of National Standards reporting and any public league table which is drawn up," says NZEI’s immediate past-President Frances Nelson.
NZEI also believes there is a big danger that if the media can publish school league tables based on "National Standards" information, and schools are incentivised if they "perform better", then some schools won’t want students who might drag down their overall school achievement data.
"If the government stands by and allows National Standards information to be used to publicly judge and compare schools, and to reward high-performing schools, then there is no doubt some schools will make a conscious decision to exclude special needs children," Ms Nelson says.
"These privacy issues and the potential impact on special needs students, along with the increased school competition that National Standards will promote, again highlight the dangers of a one-size fits-all, tick-the-box approach to education. They also underline the fact that such issues were never thought through in the haste to implement the Standards".
NZEI is advising Boards not to take any action with regard to reporting and submitting "National Standards" information at this stage because of the issues around the integrity of the data and the need to ensure that the privacy of individual students is not compromised. << less
Tuesday - November 22nd 2011
National needs to be open and transparent about plans for ECE
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is urging National to be open and transparent about its plans for early childhood education given the experience of the last election. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is urging National to be open and transparent about its plans for early childhood education given the experience of the last election.
In announcing policy in the lead up to the 2008 election, National failed to signal the massive funding cuts it made to ECE when it became government. Those cuts saw hundreds of millions of dollars stripped from thousands of ECE services around the country.
"ECE services and communities are understandably a little wary of what National's true agenda might be considering they were completely blind-sided by the cuts," says NZEI National Executive member Hayley Whitaker.
Under National's education policy, it would set a 2015 target of 98% of new entrants having participated in early childhood education.
NZEI says that recognises that early childhood education is the foundation for all future learning but any drive to boost participation must promote quality services and qualified teachers.
"That means early childhood education which is properly funded, is affordable for parents, provides low ratios and effective learning environments and has 100% fully qualified staff," says Hayley Whitaker.
"There’s no point in trying to encourage participation on the one hand, while cutting funding to services on the other. The funding cuts to those services with more than 80% qualified staff has pushed up fees to parents and created barriers to participation."
Hayley Whitaker says it is still disappointing that National does not recognise the value of qualified teachers in early childhood education and will not commit to restoring the 100% fully qualified target.
NZEI says National has made a commitment to maintain 20 Hours ECE and fee controls, in a clear response to public pressure. The party is also promising changes to the funding model for ECE.
Ms Whitaker says "I think everyone would acknowledge that ECE funding is complex but we would urge National to undertake some fair and open consultation with services and communities before making wholesale change." << less
Monday - November 21st 2011
"National Standards" obsession drives education policy
National's education policy for schools is one dimensional and is all about tick-the-box compliance driven by the flawed "National Standards", says the education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa. more >>
National's education policy for schools is one dimensional and is all about tick-the-box compliance driven by the flawed "National Standards", says the education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa.
Under its just-released policy, "National Standards" are the centrepiece of National’s agenda and will now be used as the key accountability and performance measure across all schools.
"Almost everything in this policy is underpinned by National Standards," says NZEI immediate past-President Frances Nelson.
"Professional development for teachers will hinge around "National Standards", there will be more expert advisors to implement them, schools will be expected to publish plans and targets against them by a certain date, provide templates of clear school reports, and schools and teachers will have their performance measured against them."
"It's frightening to see how much more time and money National is willing to throw into 'National Standards' when parents, teachers and school communities continue to have so little confidence in them," she says.
National is also making it clear that it will do nothing to stop public league tables being drawn up based on "National Standards" information.
Frances Nelson says schools will be very alarmed by this.
"Schools know that because the Standards are so flawed, the level of moderation is so inconsistent, and implementation is so varied around the country, any student achievement data based on them is completely unreliable. It is unfair and dangerous for 'National Standards' to be used to compare and judge school performance, let alone as an accountability measure".
NZEI is also concerned that National wants to shift the resourcing model to 'incentivise school performance' as it suggests that money will be removed from those schools which are not complying with 'National Standards' or are not performing against them.
"More measuring doesn’t make the pig fatter and National's policy will simply increase the bureaucracy in education without adding value to the people who matter - children," says Ms Nelson.
NZEI also believes it is unfair that National has left it so late to release its education policy in the lead up to the election.
"We know National has an agenda for education. It should be flagged honestly and within a timeframe that people have an opportunity to debate it and make an informed decision," Ms Nelson says. << less
Friday - November 18th 2011
National Standards for bi-lingual and ESOL students is cultural bullying
Imposing National Standards on bi-lingual and ESOL students amounts to cultural bullying and will do nothing to help them become competent learners, says the education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa. more >>
Imposing National Standards on bi-lingual and ESOL students amounts to cultural bullying and will do nothing to help them become competent learners, says the education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa.
The government has changed its advice and is now telling schools they must assess bi-lingual and ESOL students and report to parents against National Standards. It is part of updated Ministry of Education guidelines to schools. Previously these students were assessed against English Language Learning Progressions which were developed by the Ministry of Education and agreed to by the Education Minister.
"National Standards are unreliable and flawed and forcing them on this group of students is a tragedy, particularly as it replaces an assessment system which was appropriate for them and recognised their special learning needs and development," says NZEI President Ian Leckie.
"Measuring bi-lingual children or children who have just arrived in New Zealand against a set of narrow National Standards, completely devalues their own language, and the other skills and knowledge they have. It will also discourage first language learning which is so important on so many levels".
Research shows that students who have strong literacy in their own language have greater success in literacy in English and bi-lingualism has been identified as a major contributor to the overall academic success of Pasifika students in New Zealand schools.
Ian Leckie says "National Standards for ESOL and bi-lingual students is completely out of step with that and will only serve to label children further and demotivate them towards becoming competent learners".
NZEI also believes schools will be reluctant to measure these students against National Standards, not only because it is unfair and inappropriate, but because they will have to include them in their official reporting.
"If National Standards information is not protected and will be used to compare schools in the form of public leagues tables, there is a risk that schools will either not include these students' results, or skew their reporting to offset them," Mr Leckie says. << less
Wednesday - November 16th 2011
Wrong approach to investment in early childhood education
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says is questioning why taxpayer money is being given to private early childhood businesses for properties in south Auckland. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says is questioning why taxpayer money is being given to private early childhood businesses for properties in south Auckland.
The government has announced that Kids Count and Learning Houses Limited will receive $1.09 million to build two new ECE services in Papakura North and Weymouth West. Another company, You and Me Limited, will receive $181,000 to extend two existing services in those areas.
"What works in low income areas are community-based services, including kindergartens and Pacific and Māori language nests, which have clearer links and cater specifically to local families and whanau," says NZEI National Executive member Hayley Whitaker.
"We know that many of these types of services tendered for these contracts and it is concerning to see them missing out. I think people should be alarmed to see hundreds of thousands of dollars of public money being given to private business to own property, run ECE services, and then reap the profits".
"It could set a dangerous precedent and doesn’t sit well in terms of trying to provide quality early childhood education. Having commercially-driven early childhood services which don't reflect the communities they are in, will simply put up more barriers for those families the government is trying to target," she says.
"It also leaves early childhood education to the vagaries of the market, because if these businesses are not running a profit, they will increase their fees, or shut up shop. There are no mechanisms nor guarantees to ensure this won't happen".
NZEI believes what these communities need is investment in a publicly funded network of early childhood services, not public investment that will simply line the pockets of private business. << less
Friday - November 11st 2011
Debate on compulsory te reo Māori welcome
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says it's good to see the issue of compulsory te reo Māori in schools being put squarely onto the political agenda and out for public debate. more >>
The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa says it's good to see the issue of compulsory te reo Māori in schools being put squarely onto the political agenda and out for public debate.
The Māori Party has released its education policy in which te reo Māori would be compulsory in schools in 2015. It also steps out a plan to increase the number of te reo Māori teachers to try and achieve that.
NZEI says compulsory te reo Māori in schools would add value to children's education and to the country as a whole.
Last year a Waitangi Tribunal report warned that te reo Māori was reaching crisis point and urgent change was needed to save it from extinction.
NZEI Matua Takawaenga Laures Park acknowledges that there would be challenges around training enough te reo speakers but having all students learning te reo and having some degree of competency would ensure the vitality of the language.
"Māori is an official language of Aotearoa and it is shameful that only a relatively small number of people are fluent".
Research shows that bi-lingualism can boost student achievement in other areas and makes other languages easier to learn.
"It is ignorant and offensive for people such as the ACT Party leader Don Brash to label te reo Māori as irrelevant and to somehow suggest it has no benefit to anyone but Māori".
NZEI also welcomes the Māori Party pledge to initiate nationwide discussion about compulsory early childhood education.
However it is disappointed that the Party has failed to come out with any policy on the controversial National Standards, given their potential to crudely label students and unfairly compare schools and communities. << less
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