The Press

Call for more male teachers

- JODY O'CALLAGHAN

Male early-childhood teachers excluded from nappy changing duties is just one example of a ‘‘sexist attitude’’ in the sector, lobbyists say.

ChildForum and the Men in Early Childhood Network NZ (ECMenz) claim there is an ‘‘unconsciou­s bias’’ against male teachers in the early-childhood sector. They make up only 2 per cent of the workforce, giving New Zealand one of the lowest rates in the world.

The organisati­ons are calling for the Government to develop policies and strategies to meet a target of at least 5 per cent male teachers in early-childhood education by 2022.

Education Minister Nikki Kaye said the ministry would look at encouragin­g diversity.

‘‘I think it’s really important to have diversity in the work force and for children to have good male role models as teachers.’’

EC-Menz president Russell Ballantyne said when he graduated as a kindergart­en teacher in 1982, there were only 20 men in the work force.

By the end of the 1980s it reached its current rate of 2 per cent men. ‘‘Early childhood isn’t diverse, there is underlying unconsciou­s bias.’’

He recently heard of a male early-childhood graduate teacher being told he was unable to change nappies or help with toileting children at his centre. It was later amended to a six-month trial for the families to get to know him before his duties were reassessed.

It was a perfect example of sexism, Ballantyne said.

‘‘All centres have strong nappychang­ing policies. If it’s not safe for a male to change [nappies], then it’s not safe for a female to.’’

Centres needed training on unconsciou­s bias, he said.

He visited the Ministry of Education and Education Council to discuss the issue last year and, while it was recognised, ‘‘no-one was prepared to pick it up and run with it’’.

He and his wife owned a centre in Dunedin with four male teachers, which was what attracted many enrolments.

ChildForum chief executive Dr Sarah Alexander, who has been highlighti­ng the country’s lack of male early-childhood teachers for at least 20 years, said no teacher should be prevented from performing their full role on the basis of gender. ‘‘It’s a human rights issue.’’

While it was a long time ago, some centres ‘‘held on to the Peter Ellis time to manage and control their staff, and to limit men’s involvemen­t as teachers’’.

Ellis spent seven years in prison after being convicted of 16 counts of sexually abusing seven children at a Christchur­ch creche in the early 1990s, but always maintained his innocence.

Other countries were ‘‘leaving us behind’’ in increasing male early-childhood teaching numbers, with the Government ‘‘failing to do anything about it’’, Alexander said.

A 2012 OECD document states ‘‘many countries are concerned that the proportion of males in teaching is significan­tly low’’.

 ?? PHOTO: JOSEPH JOHNSON/STUFF ?? These are two of 13 properties on Pages Rd, Bexley, the Christchur­ch City Council wants to purchase to make way for flood mitigation work.
PHOTO: JOSEPH JOHNSON/STUFF These are two of 13 properties on Pages Rd, Bexley, the Christchur­ch City Council wants to purchase to make way for flood mitigation work.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand