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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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Andre
Agassi dropped out of school in the 9th grade to
pursue his tennis career. He turned
professional at age 16 and went on to become a world champion.
But he deeply regretted the fact that he didn’t have a
quality education. This belief
- that nothing has a greater impact on a child's life than the
education they receive - led him to establish a charter school
for underprivileged children in a disadvantaged area of his
home-town of Las Vegas.
Opening in 2001 with year 3-5 students, the Andre Agassi
College Preparatory Academy expanded every year until it is
now a full new entrant to year 12 school with a roll of over
600. Students are chosen by ballot and almost all go on to
college. There is a waiting list of over 800.
The school has very high expectations for students. No matter
how disadvantaged their background is, the school philosophy
is based on a belief that each and every child has the
potential to succeed in education and go on to college. A
superior learning environment is provided for the students -
including a school day that is extended by an additional two
hours, weekend tutorials, and summer schools.
Crucially, parents are expected to play a key role in
not only supporting their child, but in contributing to the
school community as well.
The school formalises the commitment to each child’s success
with a three-way signed contract between teacher, parents, and
the child.[1] Essentially, teachers commit to doing whatever
is needed to ensure the student will achieve the standards
necessary to graduate from high school and gain a place in
college.
Parents are helped to understand the key role they play in a
student’s educational success. They must ensure their child
attends school well nourished and ready to learn, that they
are well behaved, honest and respectful, that they always do
their homework, and that they spend some time every night
reading. During the year parents are required to attend
parent-teacher conferences, to participate in at least 12
hours of voluntary work for the school, and to go to at least
two school board meetings. Parents are also held directly
responsible for their child’s behaviour.
Students are asked to commit to working extra hard so that
they can attend college. That means always doing their
homework, being respectful and well behaved, and promising to
talk to their teacher if they don’t understand something or
have a problem. In addition, they are required to perform
community service under the direction of their teacher as an
important part of character development.
The school’s long-term goal is to rank in the top 100 high
schools in the nation on the US
News & World Report rankings by 2016, and for all of
their graduating students to attend and compete at the
country’s top 100 colleges and universities.
This striving to achieve a high national ranking - no
mean feat for a school that draws on an underprivileged
community – is in sharp contrast to the hysterical
opposition by the teacher unions to the publication of New
Zealand National Standards data.
Last Friday, National Standards data was published on the
Ministry of Education’s website HERE,
and the week before that, on the Fairfax newspaper website HERE.
The data provides an interesting snapshot of schools including
school rolls and school funding (which generally ranges from
$4,000 to $6,000 per student, although it can be far higher).
National Standards were introduced into primary, intermediate
and some secondary schools in 2010, in order to provide
guidelines for the tracking of student progress and
achievement through the first years of school. The idea is
that if a child falls behind, National Standards will
highlight that a problem exists and the school can take steps
to help the child to catch up. The standards are used to
assess all children in years 1 to 8 (aged 5 to 12) as being above,
at, below, or well
below benchmarks in reading, writing and maths. This is
the first time that schools have been asked to report their
National Standards results to the Ministry of Education. Some
1899 schools provided the information, while 188 schools
failed to do so. Maori language schools not required to
provide their data until next year.
The results paint an interesting picture of educational
achievement in New Zealand. Of the 360,000 or so primary-age
students who have been assessed, 76 per cent had reached or
exceeded the national standards for reading, 72 per cent for
maths, and 68 per cent for writing. Broken down, the figures
show that the outcomes for the 76,000 Maori students were
lower – only 65 percent had reached or exceeded the national
standards for reading, 63 percent for maths, and 58 percent
for writing. And for the 35,000 Pasifika students, the results
were lower still with 58 percent reaching or exceeding the
standards for reading, 57 percent for maths, and 54 percent
for writing.
Differences could also be seen between girls and boys. While
the outcomes were pretty similar in maths, in reading, girls
outperformed boys in reaching or exceeding the national
standards by 80 percent to 72 percent, and in writing by 75
percent to 61 percent.
While National Standards provide an indication of the
educational achievement of younger children, the Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) provides an
evaluation at secondary
level. The
Programme
for International Student Achievement (PISA) is
an international assessment of the reading, science and
mathematical literacy of 15-year-old students that takes place
in 3-year cycles. With
education being regarded
as the single most critical investment a country can make to
raise its long-run growth potential, the OECD uses PISA to
assess half a million students from over 70 countries (which
account for nine-tenths of the world economy) to provide
rigorous international assessments of educational performance.
In the latest results, published in 2010, New Zealand was
identified as a top
flier: “The new PISA identifies several top fliers.
These are Shanghai, Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore, Finland,
Canada, Japan and New Zealand. Of course, the precise ranking
varies according to the test in question, ranging from reading
literacy to mathematics, or science. However, these countries
stand out as the strongest overall performers.”[2]
The OECD believes that by enabling countries to compare their
performance in education with that of other countries, it will
be easier for them to find ways of improving the efficiency of
their system and gain the greater benefits a better educated
workforce would provide. As they say, it is not only a matter
of resources but “how to make students learn better, how to
make teachers teach better, and how to make school systems
perform more effectively.”
An
issue that has long challenged the education sector is how to
improve the performance of boys, who are increasingly
over-represented in statistics relating to disengagement with
school.
This
week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator is Dr Barend
Vlaardingerbroek, Associate Professor of Education at the
American University of Beirut - an Otago PhD who maintains a
special interest in the New Zealand education system. In his
commentary Making
schooling work for all (even those problem teenage boys)
he examines the lagging achievement of boys:
“Boys
are over-represented in special needs classes, drop-out and
expulsion figures, and more of them leave school without
qualifications. Committees and commissions in several
countries, NZ included, have looked into the problem of the
educational woes of boys as a group.”
He asks, “Why has it become such an issue in the past 20 or
so years? Answer: the economy has changed. The labour market
lost its appetite for unskilled youths, the traditional
apprenticeship almost went out the window, and governments
responded to youth unemployment by raising the school-leaving
age. Many adolescents find themselves staying on in an
environment they don’t much like with little light at the
end of the tunnel to goad them on – and a disproportionate
number of the ‘losers’ since these game-changers have been
boys, specifically working-class boys who once left school at
age 15 and got a job (problem solved) or gritted their teeth
and stayed on to complete School Certificate at the end of
Form 5 so they could get into an apprenticeship (problem
solved).”
He
explains how many European
school systems channel learners into academic, technical and
vocational career tracks, which enable ‘problem boys’ to
successfully pursue occupationally linked career pathways. To
read the full article, click HERE.
Finding
ways to improve a country’s educational achievement is not
an easy task, but the National Standards data helps to show
the way. It is clear from the figures that pupils at the
lowest-decile schools are more likely to perform below
national standards than those at the highest-decile schools.
But claims by the unions that ‘poverty’ is the problem and
extra funding would fix it are misguided. As school principals
are quick to point out, just because a school draws on
children from lower socio-economic backgrounds, does not mean
that they cannot achieve at levels equal to or better than
other children. Nor are children from higher-socio-economic
areas miraculously endowed with extra brain-power.
One of the main factors in some schools achieving higher
benchmarks than others is the strength of the three-way
relationship between parents, students, and their teachers.
When that relationship is strong, children will do better, and
if this is commonplace throughout the whole school, it will be
reflected in the school’s attainment in National Standards.
This applies irrespective of the background of the children.
That is exactly what Andre Agassy found in his school - that
children from even seriously disadvantaged backgrounds could
succeed, but it helped immeasurably if they had the support
and commitment of their parents. That led him to introduce the
three-way contract between parent, child and teacher as a
binding pledge to the success and achievement of that student
in education.

There will be many schools that have successfully
embraced such an agreement between teachers,
students and parents - probably not overtly and as formally as
the Agassy school, but more likely informally through the
culture of the school and inspired leadership. Those schools
will undoubtedly have better results than those struggling
with disengaged parents. Yet it would be difficult to find a
parent who in their heart did not want their child to succeed
at school – it’s just that the complications of life mean
that many do not fully appreciate just how important their
support and involvement actually is for the success of their
child.
It should be the role of every school and every
parent to recognise that a child’s educational success is a
partnership between the child, the parent, and the school –
and everyone must understand their responsibilities to that
partnership.
This
week’s poll asks: Do
you support the publication of National Standards data?
Click here for poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.Andre Agassi College Preparatory Academy,
Commitment
to Excellence
2.OECD, PISA
2010 Results
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