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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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National’s back down last
week over school staffing cuts was a significant victory
for the union movement. Two of the country’s most
powerful unions - the New Zealand Educational Institute
and the Post Primary Teachers Association - flexed their
muscles and the government caved in. This is bad news
for not only for children and parents but for the long
term future of the country, since improving workforce
skills is crucial for faster economic growth and rising
living standards.
In the 2012 Budget, National announced they were
going to rationalise education spending. Instead of the
on-going focus on reducing class sizes, their new focus
was to be on improving the quality of teaching.
In spite of government spending per student on
education increasing by over 20 percent in real terms
(over and above inflation) over the last ten years,
there has been no real improvement in education
outcomes. During that time, while the rise in teacher numbers
of 12.7 percent has outpaced the 2.5 percent increase in
student numbers, student achievement as measured on
international surveys has remained static. New Zealand
now has the largest variation in student achievement within
schools in the OECD. That means that student failure is
not confined to a small number of schools, but is
widespread throughout the system. An estimated 30
percent of all students leave school without achieving
NCEA Level 2, which is widely regarded as the minimal
qualification needed to succeed in a modern economy.
Unfortunately these systemic problems are often
ignored. Just last week the President of the
Principles’ Federation Paul Drummond claimed,
“Parents know that our education system is right up
there with the best in the world and they want their
children to continue benefiting from the excellent
teaching going on in our schools which consistently
delivers high achievement results for the vast majority
of Kiwi kids”.
Clearly Mr Drummond can’t have read the latest
Education Review Office report on the teaching of
science in year 5 to 8 schools. ERO found there were
major problems with the quality of science teaching and
learning with only three percent of schools having
science programmes that could be considered to be highly
effective. A quarter of schools were identified as generally
effective, less than two thirds of the schools were
considered partially
effective and a tenth were found to be
not effective.
The report concludes, “Science programmes in the
less effective schools lacked coherence and continuity.
The science component was often not made explicit to
students. Teachers provided flawed investigative
approaches or stand-alone lessons that were not clearly
linked to the science curriculum. Student involvement in
experimental work was variable. Teachers had little
useful data on student achievement in science and boards
had little information about the quality of teaching and
learning in science. Self review of science programmes
was a low priority in over 80 percent of schools. A lack
of knowledge and understanding of the science curriculum
requirements, and of what constitutes effective science
teaching, was evident in many schools. Many teachers do
not appear to be confident or well prepared for teaching
science. They have generally had limited ongoing
professional learning development opportunities in
science. This has contributed to the low priority many
teachers place on it.”[1]
In an increasingly technological age, the country
needs more students with proficiency in science. A lack
of quality science teaching in the early years, will
unfortunately limit the opportunity for many children to
successfully pursue a future based on science.
The reality is that worthwhile improvements in the
quality of education are unlikely to occur unless major
reform is undertaken - including to the school
curriculum itself. The New Zealand curriculum uses an
experimental “outcomes-based” approach which
replaced academic rigour, defined standards and a proper
testing regime with concepts of participation
and progress
to ensure that children do not ‘fail’. In the USA,
this approach has proved to be such a failure that many
states have returned to a standards-based syllabus that
embraces more formal methods of teaching, and provides
curriculum road maps that are clear, concise, teacher
friendly and detailed. The majority of countries that
outperform New Zealand in international tests continue
to use more traditional standards-based syllabus
models.[2]
The government’s budget plan was to marginally
increase class sizes to reduce costs and save $43
million each year for 4 years. The savings were to be
redirected into improving the quality of teaching. Under
the proposed plan, class sizes for new entrants were to
remain the same at 1 teacher to 15 students; for years 2
to 10, the ratio was to be set at 1 teacher to 27.5
students; and for years 11 to 13, it was 1 teacher to
17.5 students. As a result of these new ratios, 213 of
the country’s 2,436 schools were expected to see no
change at all; 962 were to gain less than 1 teacher; 251
were to gain more than 1 teacher; 765 were to lose less
than 1 teacher; and 245 were to lose 1 or more teachers
- capped at a maximum loss of 2 teachers over the next
three years. There was an exemption to the policy
changes – as a political concession to their Maori
Party coalition
partner, National singled out Maori
immersion schools for special treatment: their class
sizes were to remain unchanged.
With class sizes being such a key issue for the
teacher unions, National should have been better
prepared for the battle that was bound to ensue. Between
them, the teachers’ unions have 70,000 members and
some $30 million in funding. They have a history of
aggressive strike action and are masters at propaganda,
unashamedly roping in parents and children to support
their cause for better pay and conditions. This whole
unfortunate debacle has clearly illustrated the difficulty faced
by governments who try to take on powerful unions.
Interestingly, a similar battle but on a far larger
scale has been underway in the State of Wisconsin in the
USA over the last two years. Governor Scott Walker was
elected on the promise of eliminating their US$3 billion
structural deficit without raising taxes. He proposed to
achieve this by curtailing the excessive benefits paid
to public service union members. In Wisconsin state
workers were receiving health benefits 2.3 times more
valuable than those received by private sector workers,
and pension benefits 5.7 times more valuable. This
resulted in a total compensation package 29 percent
higher than comparable private sector workers. The
proposed reforms aimed to reduce the premium to around
22 percent. There were other major benefits too
including union-negotiated contracts that required
layoffs to occur on the basis of seniority, giving
long-term government employees “iron-clad” job
security.[3]
The battle fought by the union was ferocious. They
ran a candidate for Chief Justice of the Supreme Court,
who they believed would strike down the new law - if she
won. She lost. They called for the “recall” of state
senators, trying to replace three of them in order to
regain union control of the State Senate. That didn’t
work either. Then they launched a “recall”
referendum for the Governor himself, but last week he
defeated the union candidate to win by a wider margin
than before the reforms.
A report in the Washington Post pointed to the root
cause of the problems in Wisconsin - “an institution
founded to protect its members grew in size, wealth,
power and arrogance, thanks to decades of symbiotic
deals with bought politicians, to the point where it
grossly overreached. A half-century later these unions
were exercising essential control of everything from
wages to work rules in the running of government —
something that, in a system of republican governance, is
properly the sovereign province of the citizenry”.[4]
Following their victory over the government in
stopping the class size changes last week, the unions
are now saying that they do not want politicians to
“meddle” with the education system. They, of course,
are claiming they speak for parents - that it is not
helpful to children to be subjecting them to major
education reforms every time there is a change of
Government.
But the public elects politicians to make decisions and
rational choices in the best interests of the country.
If that means treading on the toes of vested interest
groups, then that is precisely what the public expects
politicians to do. The back down to the teacher unions
was not in the best interest of the country, and it was
certainly no
good for National who are now seen to be weak. Teaching
standards in New Zealand are in urgent need of
improvement and the sooner the government gets on with
that crucial task the better.
Not only that, but the news of the €100 billion bailout of Spain’s banking system
should serve as a stark reminder of the precarious state
of the global economy and the necessity for our
government to improve the quality of public spending and
balance the books. Although New Zealand’s isolation
means that we are somewhat cushioned from the turmoil in
the Eurozone, we are certainly not immune from its
impact.
This week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator, Professor
Roger Bowden, formerly of the School of Economics and
Finance at Victoria University, has been closely
following developments in Europe and shares his views of
the implications for New Zealand:
“I think the real lessons of the euromess lie with
structural changes precipitated by global economic
realities. So what are the structural implications for
Godzone, if any? The
long term is problematic. It is troublesome that so many
of our best and brightest are leaving for economic
–and I suspect social – reasons, for that does close
off a few differentiated product options for the
economy’s future. It amounts to a drain on our stock
of productive human capital. The resulting age
distribution will also raise the cost of medical and
other services, which in turn will be a drain on the
taxpayer. And there may be adverse implications for the
real estate market, already hit by tax changes. But
human capital aside, right now we have a distinctive
trade profile, based on commodities and tourism,
amounting to a comparative advantage, in trade theory
terms. However, the first thing that gives me pause is
the issue of ownership of the factors of production.
That’s the real payoff to our comparative advantage,
and it’s what we may be about to screw up”. To read Is
there a euromess in our own shop? click here>>>
Whichever way we look at it, New Zealand is in a
fragile economic situation. As a country we continue to
spend more than we earn. That makes the government’s
back down on the saving of $172 million over 4 years
that much more significant, since such savings are
necessary if the we are to return to a surplus by 2015.
Worse, National’s failure to follow through on its
policy will give strength to other vested interest
groups who will kick up a fuss when it is their sacred
cow that is being threatened. This does not bode well
for the future.
This week’s poll asks:
Should the government have
backed down on its attempt to reprioritise education spending
to improving the quality of teaching? Click here for poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.ERO, Science
in the New Zealand Curriculum
2.Muriel Newman, Selling
Our Kids Short
3.American Enterprise Institute, The
impact of Act 10 on public sector compensation in Wisconsin
4.Washington Post, What
Wisconsin Means
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