Otago Daily Times

Support plan for history teachers

-

WELLINGTON: Teachers will receive support to ensure they can teach the new history curriculum with confidence, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says.

Ms Ardern is offering the assurance after consultati­on opened last week on the New Zealand history curriculum to be taught in all schools from 2022.

Pupils up to year 10 will be taught about the early battles and migrations that shaped their region.

The subject will also be available as an option from year 11.

Ms Ardern wants the Ministry of Education to draw on local knowledge and history.

‘‘Now alongside that I'll be very keen to hear the Ministry of Education's advice on how do we then support our teaching workforce to teach that with confidence,’’ Ms Ardern said.

‘‘What we do want to do is bring in a local element so that we can draw on local knowledge, local history, and teachers are able to bring that knowledge into the classroom to help support their teaching, too.’’

The Government is seeking feedback on what the curriculum will look like.

Officials have been devising the draft curriculum which has been published online since 2019 when the Government announced New Zealand history would be taught in all schools by 2022.

Education Minister Chris Hipkins urged people to check out the content and provide feedback before the curriculum was finalised.

He also said the shift in approach would be a ‘‘watershed moment’’ for New Zealanders. — RNZ

IT is all in the name. The curriculum area teaching children about New Zealand’s past, to be introduced next year, will be called histories rather than history, highlighti­ng the fact history is not a singular version of what happened.

As the New Zealand History Teachers Associatio­n says, it and historians would view any mandated ‘‘national story’’ with horror, preferring the presentati­on of multiple views, along with teaching the skills of how to analyse and evaluate them. The associatio­n has also been clear that blame in the present for past events is not productive.

Many will see this move for New Zealand history to be taught in all schools and kura as long overdue, when for decades pupils have learned more about what shaped other countries than what happened here.

Last week, education minister Chris Hipkins released the draft curriculum content for Aotearoa New Zealand’s Histories for public consultati­on. The subject will be compulsory for pupils in school levels 1 to 10.

In his announceme­nt, he pointed out different parts of the country will have different histories to explore.

For instance, in Otago, pupils may delve deeper into the region’s Maori and Chinese heritage and how it has helped shape the area into what it is today, while in Northland Maori histories and early Croatian stories would be relevant.

Seven themes were identified for coverage when the government made its decision on the histories in 2019 : the arrival of Maori, first encounters and early colonial history, Te Tiriti o Waitangi and its history, colonisati­on and immigratio­n to New Zealand including the New Zealand Wars, evolving national identity in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, New Zealand’s role in the Pacific, and New Zealand in the late 20th century and evolution of a national identity with cultural plurality.

Already, there has been criticism from National’s education spokesman Paul Goldsmith who has described the first draft as lacking in balance and needing revision. He considers identity and identity politics are too prevalent and there needs to be a greater emphasis on our economic history and how our democracy developed.

Regardless of whether changes result from the public consultati­on, which runs until the end of May, we should not lose sight of the value of teaching young people to consider events from a variety of standpoint­s and then critically evaluate them.

We hope there will be enough time to ensure all teachers are confident about their ability to deliver this new curriculum material.

AND ANOTHER THING

Moves towards putting the H into Wakatipu seem to be gathering steam, three years after Ngai Tahu elder Sir Tipene O’Regan raised the issue.

Whakatipu is regarded as the undisputed Maori spelling and, as well as being the correct name for the lake, also appears in the names for other landmarks such as the Dart River (Te Awa Whakatipu), Hollyford River and valley (Whakatipu Katuka) and Harris Saddle (Tarahaka Whakatipu).

The question came to the fore when the new Whakatipu Wildlife Trust was launched in 2017.

The Department of Conservati­on named its Queenstown visitor centre Whakatipuw­aiMaori and the new BNZ branch in Frankton which opened last year also bears the Whakatipu name.

Predictabl­y, the idea of the h addition was criticised by Otago regional councillor Michael Laws who might still have been smarting from his ultimately unsuccessf­ul battle against putting the h in Wanganui when he was mayor there.

We would like to hope everyone has learned from the Whanganui saga and that moving to Whakatipu could be achieved without acrimony and years of pointless bickering.

There will be views on either side of the argument but, much like the teaching of New Zealand histories, this change seems sensible and ultimately inevitable.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand