Otago Daily Times

Education reforms chance to bring back fairness to system

- Peter Lyons teaches economics at Saint Peter’s College in Epsom and has written several economics texts.

WHAT’S the difference between an education hub and an education board? The answer is 30 years of misguided marketdriv­en education policy.

The Government’s Education Task Force has released its recommenda­tions. It has decided to go back to the future, albeit with New Age terminolog­y.

The recommenda­tions have predictabl­y been labelled ‘‘Stalinist’’ by some winner schools under the current system.

There is an irony that the furore over winner schools using their affluence to subvert the Auckland First XV rugby competitio­n has also hit the headlines this week. The allegation­s are that Saint Kentigern College has used its superior resources to poach players from other regions, therefore creating an unfair competitio­n.

This could be an analogy for the entire New Zealand schooling system over the past 30 years. If the task force recommenda­tions are adopted, this could go a long way to achieving greater fairness in our schooling system. Especially for the most disadvanta­ged communitie­s.

In the 1990s, New Zealand’s schooling system was dominated by a marketdriv­en philosophy. Competitio­n between schools would ensure greater efficiency and improved performanc­e. Winner schools could even ‘‘take over’’ loser schools just like in the real world of business. The legacy of this ideology still dominates our schooling system.

But there are some tragic flaws in this ideology. There was never a level playing field to start with. Winner schools have far greater access to additional funding. This may be through internatio­nal fee paying students, wealthy alumni, affluent fee paying parents or even black tie dinners that can raise an additional $100,000 in a single evening.

Winner schools could then poach higher quality staff or top performing students and sports stars. They could offer state of the art facilities and infrastruc­ture. They could fund profession­al sports academies staffed by profession­al coaches.

The market for schooling resembled a running race with some participan­ts on steroids and others with their legs tied. The losers were then castigated by ERO for their failure to perform.

This task force has recognised the flaws and limitation­s of schools being regarded as independen­t standalone business entities in competitio­n with each other. Schooling has huge spillover benefits for the wider society.

The market model of schooling fails to recognise or capture these spillover benefits. It treats education as a pure private good. These spillover benefits are the reason for statefunde­d education in the first place. Winner schools and loser schools inevitably mean winner pupils and loser pupils. The pupils who lose in such a system eventually cost us all. We can ill afford to have a sizeable rump of our population being failed by our schooling system.

The task force’s recommenda­tions are aimed at ensuring greater fairness for all New Zealand children in their schooling. Children from affluent background­s will always get a better deal because their parents can afford to pay more. At least this reform aims at some rebalancin­g.

Let’s hope these recommenda­tions are adopted. They make sense to me. There will be an inevitable backlash from those ‘‘winners’’ who benefit under the current regime. The recommenda­tions are not ‘‘Stalinist’’. They are common sense.

A

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? The market for schooling resembled a running race with some participan­ts on steroids and others with their legs tied.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES The market for schooling resembled a running race with some participan­ts on steroids and others with their legs tied.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand