Otago Daily Times

Survey suggests strike is polarising

- JOHN LEWIS

TODAY’S NZEI strike by Otago and Southland primary and intermedia­te teachers appears to be dividing parents in the community.

An Otago Daily Times online survey yesterday revealed 55% of parents supported teachers in their fight for better work conditions, while 45% did not and were becoming increasing­ly frustrated by the inconvenie­nce the strikes were causing.

More than 100 people voted in the online poll.

Comments also reflected the mood of the community.

One person said: ‘‘Go hard teachers. You deserve it after National gave you’s [sic] nothing for years’’.

However, another said: ‘‘If the teachers don’t like the pay offered, then why don’t they join private enterprise and see how much they can earn from their education services?’’

Teachers have said their fight is not all about pay. Rather, the sticking point was that the new offer did not address work load and teacher release conditions.

Teachers will meet this morning in Dunedin, Balclutha, Queenstown, Wanaka, Invercargi­ll, Oamaru, Gore and Alexandra to consider the Ministry of Education’s latest offer.

Following the meetings, hundreds of demonstrat­ors are expected to protest around the region — including more than 1000 in Dunedin’s Octagon.

The ministry’s $698 million offer is an increase of $129 million from the previous offer, and includes a 3% pay increase to teachers’ base salaries each year for the next three years; an additional step at the top of the pay scale and an increase to the maximum base salary for all qualificat­ion groups; a significan­t investment in learning support to address both the needs of children, increase teacher supply and ease workload on teachers; and a oneoff gross payment of $500 for all NZEI Te Riu Roa members.

THIS week’s teacher strikes will punish parents, generate both sympathy and hostility towards teachers and reduce productivi­ty. Whether they advance the conversati­on around the future of our primary schools is another question.

Strikes work for the same reason they fail — they become the focal point, rendering an issue to its most simplistic slogans while punishing innocent parties in an attempt to gain leverage. Which is a shame because, in this case, there are serious issues at play, issues most New Zealanders should be capable of discussing soberly.

How big do we want our classroom rolls to be? How many extra teachers and classrooms will we need to achieve that? Should highneeds children be in our regular classrooms and, if so, should dedicated staff support those children to ensure the rest of the class isn’t neglected?

Are we losing teachers and failing to replace them? If so, should teacher salaries be far higher to attract more people and retain them? Should we all pitch in as a community to ensure afterschoo­l activities are run well regardless of teacher involvemen­t, or should teachers do that for us? If so, are we willing to pay them more for that service?

Do teachers spend the bulk of their personal time planning, writing reports and marking? Are they working from home when staff car parks are empty after 3.30pm on weekdays and throughout the school holidays? Can that work be done at school during normal business hours, including school holidays?

Are teachers happy to argue on the one hand that the best of them are leaving for other profession­s, yet on the other hand demand those good teachers be paid the same as the worst, to ensure collegiali­ty?

If we must spend more on salaries, extra support staff, extra teachers and extra classrooms, where should that money come from? Should we raise taxes? Should we change how we divvy up the tax take to put far more focus on primary schools? Our two major political parties create policy by canvasing, consulting, forming committees, listening to advocates, experts and lobbyists. They gauge the public mood and alter course accordingl­y, ensuring they fall, for the most part, just to the left or right of that mood.

And what has that mood delivered? That if tertiary study is even cheaper, we’ll vote for you. That if you give us tax cuts, we’ll vote for you. That if you throw billions of dollars at the regions, we’ll vote for you. That if you put environmen­tal causes ahead of industry, we’ll vote for you.

When it comes to our primary schools, we seem to have indicated things are OK as they are. Are they? Or are our teachers right when they say we are heading towards the catastroph­ic scenario of classes filled with children but no staff. Where is the peerreview­ed, unbiased data?

These issues must be analysed, debated, understood and, if at all possible, settled. Instead we are seeing what should be a serious conversati­on careen towards the ad hominem, sloganfill­ed rabbit hole of teachers and their sup porters versus the rest. Such is the nature of strikes.

It is on all of us — not just teachers and government — to do far better than this. It is a discussion we simply cannot have while shouting at each other, only referencin­g extreme examples and refusing to countenanc­e the concerns of others. It’s a discussion we can’t have when successive government­s declare there is simply no more funding for schools — despite allocating billions of dollars to other votegrabbi­ng policies.

In the end it all comes down to money and how we prioritise the spending of it. And that is a conversati­on demanding reason, facts and the frank acceptance that changes and sacrifices may be needed. But as long as hyperbole, ad hominem attacks and exaggerate­d slogans trump accurate, respectful debate, we will solve very little.

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