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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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3
August 2008
Education
Matters
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Education
matters. If we are really serious about building a first world
economy, then we must ensure that every child – no matter
what their background – is given the skills to contribute to
their fullest possible extent to our nation’s future.
That
is why it is surely a national disgrace that one
in five New Zealand children leave school without the most
basic reading, writing or maths skills. Since the vast
majority of New Zealand children – around 96 percent -
attend state schools, it is the government that must be held
accountable for this massive failure. After
three terms in office, there can be no excuses.
Education
has always been the lifeline to a better future. Generations
of parents have struggled and sacrificed in order to ensure
that their children gained the qualifications needed to secure
a job with good career prospects.
My
own family was no different. My parents came from an era where
children were forced into work from primary school. They
watched as kids who were no brighter than they, but had been
allowed to stay at school, gained better jobs and higher
wages. As a result, my brother and I were the first in our
family to achieve any sort of higher qualification. That we
both gained doctorate degrees is a tribute to the ambition of
our parents, who were determined to see us succeed, as well as
to our own resolve not to let them down.
But
education has changed dramatically since the days when we were
students. Even during the 20 years that I was a teacher, the
system has undergone an inexorable transformation. Great
people who had traditionally been ‘called’ into teaching
from a variety of other career paths are now locked out by the
new teacher training requirements. The surrender of the
education system to the excesses of radical feminism and
political correctness has meant that rather than simply
ensuring that girls caught up with boys in the achievement
stakes, boys are now regularly left behind, with men having
been all but driven out of the profession. And with an army of
4,000 public servants governing the school sector, it is
little wonder that teachers these days feel they spend half of
their lives filling in unnecessary forms and complying with a
mindless bureaucracy instead of teaching.
Dr
Kevin Donnelly, Director of Education Strategies and author of
the book “Dumbing Down”, is our NZCPR Guest Commentator
this week. In his opinion piece “How Effective is New
Zealand’s Education System?” Dr Donnelly states:
“It
is clear that New Zealand students in mathematics and science
are consistently outperformed by students in countries like
Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong, Belgium and the Netherlands. Talk
to tertiary academics, employers and parents and the consensus
is that standards have fallen with many students leaving
school unable to write a grammatically correct, lucid essay,
complete basic algorithms without a calculator or demonstrate
a broad knowledge of New Zealand’s history, social
institutions and culture”.
He
goes on to explain, “There
is an alternative approach to strengthening New Zealand’s
education system. Based
on research undertaken by two European academics Ludger
Woessman and Eric A Hanusheck, the best way to raise standards
is to free schools from provider capture by giving them the
freedom and autonomy to compete and best respond to the
demands of the market place”. To
read Dr Donnelly’s article, click
here >>>
Around
the world, progressive governments have understood the huge
improvement in standards that result from establishing a
competitive marketplace in education, whereby schools compete
to lift student achievement. Whether they are run by churches,
charities, businesses or special interest groups in the profit
or not-for-profit sector, research shows that private sector
schools are, on the whole, far more responsive to the needs of
students and the demands of parents than government schools.
In some countries like Sweden, Denmark and the Netherlands,
where there is a well established education marketplace with
state and private schools operating in concert and parents
free to take their education funding to the school that best
meets their children’s needs, political opposition to
private schools is virtually non-existent. (To read the experience of a
New Zealand student who spent her final high school year in
Sweden, click here>>>)
That
is certainly not the case here. In New Zealand, the whole
education sector is now highly politicised, including the
curriculum itself. The government’s agenda is being foisted
onto the schools, as any cursory examination of the school
curriculum will show. “Gender issues” are being pushed
onto children as young as five, a strong anti-business bias
comes through, and the multitude of arguments in favour of
man-made global warming would lead students to believe that
there is a crisis and a scientific consensus when we know that
is far from the truth.1
Political
opposition to private sector education – largely spearheaded
by the powerful teacher unions - can be intense. Any moves
towards greater parental choice in education or increased
school autonomy, is strenuously opposed. The argument is
usually that greater school choice will only benefit the rich
kids, disadvantaging the poor. Nothing could be further from
the truth!
In
New Zealand, parents who want to send their children to a
non-government school are forced to pay a significant
financial penalty. That involves paying the cost of private
school fees on top of the taxes they pay to finance government
schools. In effect, this means that while well-off families
can meet the expense of paying ‘double’ school fees, the
vast majority of families cannot. Nor can the disadvantaged
afford the property values that would enable them live in
neighbourhoods with a decent state school.
As
a result, New Zealand children who are being failed by their
local state school are priced out of any alternatives by
government policy: zoning laws that force children to attend
their closest school, no matter how bad it is, and funding
restrictions that prevent education funding from being used
for non-government schools. This is in spite of well-known
research that overwhelmingly shows that the educational
outcomes for such children would improve if they had free
access to independent schools.
Whether
we like it or not, in the state school system, teachers and
their administrators are forced to serve their political
masters - the government. While they invariably do all they
can to ensure that students get a good education, they simply
do not have the same freedom and autonomy enjoyed by educators
in the private sector. There, survival depends on firstly
ensuring that students succeed to their highest potential, and
secondly, that their parents - who pay the bills - are
well-satisfied with their progress. In other words, while the
state sector has its focus on the smooth running of the
system, the private sector has its focus on student success.
In
the United States, the Charter School movement is
demonstrating how public schools can make exceptional progress
in lifting standards and improving student outcomes, by
freeing them up from bureaucratic constraints and introducing
some of the disciplines of the marketplace - including
performance contracts for student achievement. There are now
more than 4,000 charter schools operating in more than 40
states, with many charter school operators now running
networks of successful schools.
2
The
Economist
recently examined how Charter Schools were being used by Mayor
Michael Bloomberg, to turn around New York’s failing public
school system. Graduation
rates are now the highest they have been in decades, and with
the gap between white and minority students rapidly narrowing,
Mayor Bloomberg intends to convert the remaining city schools
to charter schools.
3
Back
at home, with around a half of Maori students and a third of
Pacific Island students leaving school without even achieving
a Level 1 NZCEA qualification, more of the same is not the
answer.4
We should be embracing the successes from overseas and begin
trialing them at home. At the very least we should expect that
every school leaver has achieved the basics of competency in
reading, writing and arithmetic as a result of their spending
twelve years at school. Is that too much to ask?
This
week’s poll asks: Do you believe that a child’s
education funding should be able to be used at an independent
school? Go
to Poll >>>
If you
would like to comment on this issue please click
>>>
FOOTNOTES:
1. Norman La Rocque, Bulk
funding is dead: long live bulk funding
2.The Economist, The
Great Experiment
3. Roger Kerr, Scoring
Our Schools: What Makes for a Good Education
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