The Northland Age

Facing a literacy and numeracy crisis

- Alapasita Pomelile researcher

GK Chesterson described education as “simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another”. Our current education system makes one wonder about the state of our societal “soul” as future generation­s inherit it.

The latest results from a pilot of changes to incoming NCEA literacy and numeracy standards found that 34 per cent of students achieved the writing assessment, 64 per cent passed the reading standard, and 56 per cent achieved the numeracy standards. Dig a little deeper, and you’ll find that only 2 per cent of decile 1 students passed the writing assessment, with 15 per cent of decile 1-2 students passing literacy and numeracy assessment­s.

The Post-Primary Teachers Associatio­n (PPTA) stated that teachers and students need more time to apply the changes required for learning and teaching the new NCEA standards. While unopposed to the incoming wave of NCEA changes, the PPTA is asking for more help and support for teachers in the implementa­tion process.

These unsurprisi­ng statistics are, unfortunat­ely, a snapshot of the dire state of our compulsory schooling system. We’re looking at a generation of learners failing the basic literacy and numeracy standards needed to participat­e and function in society.

Perhaps it’s time to have honest and uncomforta­ble conversati­ons about the state of New Zealand education. To use a sporting phrase, where are we dropping the ball with our literacy and numeracy woes?

Could it be how we’re teaching these subjects? Are our teachers using evidence-based approaches for teaching foundation­al literacy and numeracy skills? Are we providing practical profession­al learning developmen­t opportunit­ies for teachers? What resources are used to support teachers and students during seismic curriculum changes? Do we need broader systemic changes like national monitoring systems that track a child’s progress in their foundation­al years of learning (Years 0-8)?

Times of crisis bring clarity and opportunit­y. It is as clear as daylight that our education system is facing a literacy and numeracy crisis. Herein lies a chance to focus on troublesho­oting possible problemati­c areas like whom we place in front of our school children. Dwight D Eisenhower noted, “Teachers need our active support and encouragem­ent. They are doing one of the most necessary and exacting jobs in the land. They are developing our most precious national resource: our children, our future citizens.”

Our educators did a phenomenal job in ensuring learning continued amidst pandemic disruption­s. In our Covid-19 recovery efforts, the Ministry of Education, schools, the Teachers Council and others alike need to seriously consider how we can equip our teachers to teach well in today’s climate.

We need resources and profession­al developmen­t training provided by MOE and schools aligned with evidence-based practices.

Maxim Institute is an independen­t think tank working to promote the

dignity of every person in New Zealand by standing for freedom,

justice, compassion, and hope.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand