The New Zealand Herald

Time to speak up on ideas from school taskforce

- Briar Lipson is a researcher in education at The New Zealand Initiative.

The Tomorrow’s Schools Independen­t Taskforce sees competitio­n and self-governance as bad, collaborat­ion and ministry management as good. It is seductive stuff, if a little Orwellian.

But competitio­n and collaborat­ion are not mutually exclusive. And if current performanc­e is anything to go by, yet more bureaucrat­ic management will only make things worse.

According to the ministry’s own data, out of 2400-plus state schools, only 154 required some form of statutory interventi­on in the three years to January 2017. That means 15 out of 16 school boards performed satisfacto­rily, as judged by the ministry and ERO. This hardly seems to call for a dramatic restructur­e.

Yet this is exactly what the minister’s independen­t taskforce is recommendi­ng. It wants to dismantle competitio­n, end parental choice, turn boards of trustees into impotent advisers and have ministry offshoots manage every state school.

There are three possible explanatio­ns. The first is that the taskforce, and/or the minister, is philosophi­cally opposed to choice and competitio­n. Second, the taskforce believes “one in 16” could be reduced to zero if only the state directly managed every school. Aside from the fact there is no evidence that this is so, it surely makes more sense for successful schools to remain in the safe hands of their local trustees, leaving state agencies free to focus on struggling schools.

The final, and most likely, explanatio­n for the taskforce’s recommenda­tions is that its members are suffering from the streetligh­t effect — an observatio­nal bias that occurs when researcher­s only search for something where it’s easiest to look. But their mistake is plain to see. Early in their 148-page report, they accurately describe the symptoms of New Zealand education’s malaise. The performanc­e of our schools has slipped. The gap between disadvanta­ged and otherwise students has grown. The quality of schools is highly variable and particular types of schools (small schools, isolated schools and those serving lower socioecono­mic communitie­s) are more likely to face challenges than others.

It would be time well spent if it prefaced an accurate diagnosis.

But boards of trustees and competitio­n seem unlikely to be the problem, as the “15/16” schools attest. Rather, trustees are our unpaid warrior army — 19,000 strong, diverse, representa­tive, and for the most part doing a good job.

Successive Government­s, of both hues, have failed to implement meaningful educationa­l measuremen­t. Teacher unions tend to resist such measuremen­t.

Some of the most ambitious high school boards have replaced NCEA with Cambridge or IB exams for many students. This way, at least they and the students find out where they stand compared with students elsewhere. By comparison, NCEA masks such vast variation in students’ actual achievemen­t as to be virtually meaningles­s. In primaries, National Standards have now been abandoned.

It is disadvanta­ged children who most need their schools to be effectivel­y managed. They have the most to lose when their schools adopt ideologica­l fads like modern learning environmen­ts, whole-language approaches to reading, and a curriculum that promotes competenci­es over knowledge.

So often it has been our ministry imposing these fads on our schools.

Encouragin­gly, there is growing agreement among Kiwi academics and teachers that powerful knowledge must be put back at the heart of the school curriculum, for the sake of educationa­l equity. And yet the taskforce ignores this.

It is now seeking feedback on its recommenda­tions. Trustees, teachers, parents and grandparen­ts, now is your time to speak up. It will soon be too late.

 ??  ?? Briar Lipson comment
Briar Lipson comment

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand