NZCPR
Guest Forum Helen
Simpson Student
leader, Auckland University 24 June 06 How
our Schools Fail Printer
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I
never imagined how a country, socialist-orientated in so many
ways, could administer quality education. Fortunately, when I
got the chance to spend my final year of high school in
Sweden
, I was pleasantly surprised.
The
first thing I noticed upon entering a Swedish classroom was
the unique atmosphere of freedom. There were no uniforms,
teachers were addressed by their first names and many students
seemed genuinely interested in what was being taught. They
respected teachers not because they were told to, but because
the teachers had earned it. Rudeness and disobedience towards
teachers was an extremely rare occurrence.
One
of the first questions I was asked by the principal was what
subject line I wanted to take. Unsure of what she meant, I
rattled off some of my interests. The next day I learnt that my
subjects for the year were to include philosophy, psychology,
politics, mathematics, English, Swedish, film, geography and
fine arts. I couldn’t have asked for better unless I was at
a university. The idea of subject lines is that they allow
students to pursue their unique skills and passions. Any
student aged fifteen and upwards has the chance to specialise
in a subject range of their choice, from mechanics to
humanities, fine arts, environmental science and much more.
One of my friends could speak five languages. Another built a
car in his final year of school. I
found that, despite the usual complaints about school, many of
my friends seemed genuinely interested in attending school.
There were few, if any, repercussions for missing days at
school, but I seldom witnessed students skipping classes.
Sweden’s remarkable atmosphere of freedom and
choice is a direct consequence of their school voucher system,
which allocates a portion of money (proportionate to the
average cost of educating a child in a state school) to every
parent to allow them to select the school of their choice.
An
essential read for any critic of public education systems is
Bruce Goldberg’s Why Schools Fail. As Goldberg points
out, it is the failure of the education system to recognise
individuality that presents a great problem. ‘What careful
observation of children actually shows’, writes Goldberg,‘is that great harm is done when there is a
systematic suppression of a child’s interest, values, and
idiosyncratic potentials. Indeed, it is the denial of
individuality, the idea that everyone must follow some general
plan, that is at the core of the failure of schools.’[1]
Goldberg
is right. Interest is a vital motivator for any student- and
is the main reason why our universities have evolved to create
such a diverse range of subjects. Why, then, does subject
choice continue to stagnate in many of our schools? One reason
is incentive. Just as in any financial endeavour, if a company
or organisation has no incentive to provide quality service
and choice to customers, then they are unlikely to do so.
Likewise, if schools have little financial incentive to
provide quality and diversity to students, the same outcome
develops.
The
root of the problems with our education system lies in our
political system. In
New Zealand
, any parent who chooses to send their child to a private
school must pay twice for their child’s education. The
system disadvantages those who can’t afford to go to private
schools through the possibility of poorer education standards,
and it disadvantages the parents of those who can. It also
disadvantages anyone who has the vision and passion to set up
their own school, because few parents can afford the extra
(and astronomical) costs needed to fund independent schools.
Sweden
’s voucher system, though not without its problems, has
created a system in which schools have a reason to provide
quality education to its students. It also gives students the
opportunity to attend a private or a public school depending
on what’s best for them.
Research
has found that the number of independent schools has increased
dramatically since
Sweden
introduced a voucher system.A BBC education correspondent wrote in 2004 that the
number of independent schools had risen from virtually none
prior to reform, to over 800.[2]
State schools have improved because competition between them
and the rising number of independent schools has provided a
motivation for them to do so.[3]
And, interestingly, it is the poor who have taken the greatest
advantage of the new system by choosing independent schools at
a higher rate than wealthier families.[4]
I
want to see a
New Zealand
in which all minds can flourish. I envisage an education
system which, like
Sweden
, encourages an environment in which every individual has his
or her educational needs catered for according to their unique
abilities. Parental and student choice is an imperative force
in creating and maintaining a vibrant educational
atmosphere.
[1]
Bruce Goldberg, Chapter 1, ‘Is Educational Theory
Scientific?’ from Why Schools Fail.
Washington
,
D.C.
, Cato Institute, 1996, p.3.
[2]
Mike Baker, ‘Swedish Schools Enjoy School Choice,