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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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19
July 2009
Improving
Outcomes
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A truly free society is one that releases the energies and creativity and
abilities of everyone. It prevents some people from
arbitrarily suppressing others. Freedom means diversity, but
also mobility. It enables today’s disadvantaged to become
tomorrow’s privileged, and, in the process, enables everyone
from top to bottom, to enjoy a fuller and richer life. - Free to Choose, by Milton and Rose Friedman
In a free society, the traditional way for today’s
disadvantaged to become tomorrow’s privileged is through
education. Throughout the ages parents have made extraordinary
sacrifices to ensure their children succeed at school, so they
can gain the qualifications needed for a good job and a better
life.
The system falls down however, when children fail to properly
connect with the education system – or more accurately, when
the education system fails to connect with them. While the
reasons for this can be a complex – often relating to family
breakdown, welfare dependency and poor teaching - the reality
is that a lack of a decent education in this day and age is
all too often a passport to poverty.
Truancy is one of the clearest indicators of educational
failure. The Ministry of Education tracks student truancy
through a week-long survey of the country’s 2,426 state and
state integrated schools carried out every second year.[1] Since the Labour Government did not consider this
issue important enough to facilitate the survey last year, the
latest available statistics are for 2006.
Those 2006 figures show that the number of students becoming
disconnected from education is increasing with some 30,000 children skipping school each week - 4.1 percent
of the 750,000 students attending state schools.
The 2006 truancy survey provided in-depth details about the
problem. It showed that truancy rates for Maori (7 percent)
and Pacific Island students (6.2 percent) were considerably
higher than for European (2.8 percent) and Asian students (2.9
percent). Maori students attending Maori language primary
schools were seen to have a far higher truancy rate (5.3
percent) than Maori students in all other primary schools (3.7
percent). It also showed that the 66 schools with the highest
truancy rates across the country averaged 42 percent Maori and
Pacific Island students.
As could be expected, the socio-economic ranking of the school
was shown to be a significant indicator of truancy with decile
1 schools having a truancy rate of 6.3 percent, while decile
10 schools had a truancy rate of only 1.8 percent. State
schools were found to have double the truancy rate of state
integrated schools, and although not surveyed, the truancy
rate in private schools could be expected to be minimal.
As a rule, state school truancy was seen to increase according
to the age of the students with primary schools having an
overall truancy rate of 1.9 percent, intermediate schools 2.2
percent, composite schools 3.5 percent, and secondary schools
8.3 percent. These 2006 rates show that truancy has increased
significantly since 1998, when the figures were 1.4 percent
for primary, 1.4 percent for intermediate, 2.5 percent for
composite and 5.6 percent for secondary schools.
The 2006 survey showed that while the size of schools did not
appear to have a significant impact on truancy, their regional
location did, with the rate of unjustified absence from
schools in Northland, Gisborne and the Bay of Plenty higher
than other regions. Interestingly, according to the Ministry
of Social Development 2006 regional benefit data, these three
areas had the three highest percentage rates of the Domestic
Purposes Benefit dependency in the country, and the three
highest percentages of Maori on welfare.[2]
The point is that New Zealand’s high rate of school truancy
is symptomatic of a wider malaise deep within society, and
until the underlying causes are addressed, this problem will
create increasingly serious consequences for the country as a
whole. After all, the economic cost of truancy cannot be
over-emphasised with dysfunctional unskilled New Zealanders
costing the country billions of dollars in lost tax revenues,
in welfare dependency, and in crime.
This week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator Dr Michael Irwin, a
senior lecturer in education at Massey University and author
of Educating Boys:
Helping Kiwi boys succeed at school,
explains that, “Longitudinal studies conducted in New
Zealand and overseas have established a clear correlation
between truancy and academic achievement; truancy and criminal
behaviour; truancy and substance abuse; truancy and
unemployment; truancy and early parenting.”
He argues that “if we reduce truancy we would reduce crime.
Youth offenders (under 17 years old) make up 22% of total
crime; most of this is property offences. 24% of all criminal
offences are committed between 9am and 3:30pm. A suggested
scenario: play truant… need some money, a bit of
excitement… break into a property… sell stolen goods…
receive money… use money to entertain self/peers. There is
very clear correlation between truancy and offending”.
On top of all this, New Zealand faces another worrying
development - the progressive “feminisation” of the school
curriculum (driven by radical feminists influential within the
Ministry of Education) is increasingly marginalising boys.
With 80 percent of all youth offenders being male, the growing
disengagement of boys is a very serious problem for society.
Yet there are no signs that the Ministry of Education is
making any serious effort to restore the balance. Instead,
their attention appears to be on other radical measures such
as putting in place the foundation for what will undoubtedly
become the compulsory teaching of Maori language in schools.[3]
This state of boys’ education in New Zealand is a disgrace.
Dr Irwin suggests that in order to improve their educational
outcomes boys “want hands-on active learning; learning that
is relevant and with the opportunity for challenge and
competition. Boys like clear boundaries and expectations, fair
justice and opportunities to succeed. The key is quality
teachers and supportive schools.” To read Dr Irwin’s full
article, click the sidebar link>>>.
While millions of dollars is being spent on reducing truancy -
including bringing prosecutions in extreme cases - the
research shows that many students play truant because of low
expectations. As our regular NZCPR Columnist, former secondary
school principal Allan Peachey MP points out, “Too
often schools fail because school leaders and teachers have
expectations of students that fall below those students’ own
levels of self-esteem. What
is so hard about forgetting where youngsters come from and
aiming for excellence for each of them?
What is so hard about setting goals for students and
expecting them to reach those goals?
Young New Zealanders do not need adults who make
excuses for them, or who don’t expect enough of them.
They need adults who believe in them, who encourage
them to succeed, and who role-model success for them.”[4]
That goes for parents too. Too many parents of children who
are chronic truants are long-term welfare dependents, who
don’t value education, books or learning. That is especially
the case for Maori who are significantly over-represented in
all long-term welfare statistics, especially the Domestic
Purposes Benefit. The hedonistic lifestyles that many of these
chaotic families lead are deeply damaging to children. Without
a father or a working role model, children from such families
are doomed to underachieve. And in spite of the evidence of
disastrous outcomes for children, successive governments have
failed to introduce even minor reforms to the welfare system
that could make a difference - such as linking welfare
payments to child’s attendance at school.
There is also a strong case for bringing market mechanisms
into the education system, especially when it comes to
providing for chronic truants and other at-risk students. If
such children, who are regarded as problems at the present
time, were given a “scholarship” entitlement based on their share of the
education budget - with a premium to compensate for the extra
resources that they would need to be helped to ‘catch up’
- then suddenly schools would have a powerful economic
incentive to compete for such students. By providing them with
educational experiences and support mechanisms that would
enable them to engage in education and succeed to the best of
their ability, the lives of these children would be completely
turned around.
And if such a scholarship system lifts the quality of
education for at-risk students there is no reason why it would
not work for all students - as it does in Sweden.
Ultimately, if all New Zealand children are to succeed in
education, parents need to encourage them to do well at school,
teachers need to be good at their job, and schools need to set
high standards of academic achievement and school attendance.
The Government’s recent proposal to introduce National
Standards is designed to further improve school performance by
assessing students against national standards of literacy and
numeracy. Just as all schools are reviewed by the Education
Review Office at the present time, with reports available for
all parents to see on the ERO website[5] – National Standard data will help parents to better
understand the progress of their children. With education
being the key to advancement at all levels of society, any
such moves to improve schools, lift student achievement, and
empower parents, are to be welcomed.
This
week’s poll asks: How
do you rate New Zealand’s education system? Go
to poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1. Ministry Education, Attendance, Absence
and Truancy in New Zealand Schools in 2006
2.Ministry
of Social Development, Regional
Council Benefit Factsheets
3. Allan Peachey, Conspicuously
Politically Incorrect
4. Ann Tolley, Education
Bill to raise standards
5. Education Review Office, Individual
School Reviews
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