Otago Daily Times

ERO head: discipline­d kids need support

- JOHN GERRITSEN

AUCKLAND: Education Review Office chief executive Nicholas Pole wants more support for children facing a standdown or exclusion from school.

Appearing before the Royal Commission on Abuse in Care, in Auckland, Mr Pole said families needed help navigating disciplina­ry processes.

‘‘My own view is there should be greater protection­s and greater advocacy and support for whanau going through the process of having their child stooddown or excluded.’’

Too many children who were excluded from a school were being enrolled with correspond­ence school Te Kura instead of with another regular school, Mr Pole said.

High levels of exclusion and standdowns were often linked to poor practices in schools, he said.

‘‘Often it is a manifestat­ion of the quality of teaching, the quality of leadership, the quality of governance, practices and systems in the school and a lack of that collective teacher efficacy where teachers are working together to make sure every single learner is successful.’’

Schools’ cultural competence varied greatly and only about 10%of schools fulfilled their obligation­s under the Treaty of Waitangi, Mr Pole said.

‘‘We see some schools who do this well, that’s not the majority. So at the moment in terms of our assessment and our assessment with respect to responsive­ness to Te Tiriti, only about 10% of schools we are working with we would say are reflecting their obligation­s to the fullest extent at present.’’

The number one focus of the review office (ERO) was support for Maori children, Mr Pole said.

ERO had reported bullying was a major problem in schools, he said.

Antibullyi­ng initiative­s could reduce the level of bullying but did not eradicate it altogether because it was a wider societal problem, he said.

‘‘There is something about New Zealanders, and you only have to be on the side of a 9yearold’s soccer field in even affluent areas — having been a soccer coach for many years— where parents’ behaviour on the sideline is atrocious, and this is played into our schools. I think it’s something we need a national conversati­on about.’’

The commission should consider whether it should be mandatory for teachers to report any cases of suspected abuse, Mr Pole said.

Counsel assisting the commission Tania Sharkey asked Mr Pole and ERO officials about the extent of their power over private schools and their boarding facilities.

Mr Pole said there had been cases where the values of private schools and of the parents who sent their children to them did not support children’s wellbeing. — RNZ

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