Education Minister Anne Tolley has urged people to look
beyond the controversy surrounding national standards as
processes get underway to implement it in primary and
intermediate schools.
Click photo to enlarge
Anne Tolley.
Advisors this week begin training teachers in the
delivery of national standards, and in a speech delivered in
Auckland today Mrs Tolley said she believed the new policy was
the biggest and most positive the education sector had seen in
20 years.
National standards are benchmarks in reading, writing and
maths that will be used to assess year-one to -eight
children, with regular reports sent to parents.
Many in the education sector have been critical of the new
teaching requirements, demanding a trial to test it first and
fearing league tables produced under the policy would be used
by media to make black and white judgements of individual
schools.
Mrs Tolley said schools were not required to report
achievement data to the Education Ministry until 2012 and, in
the meantime, stakeholders including unions, education
associations and the ministry had agreed to work together on
how data was to be reported and presented.
A three-year monitoring and evaluation programme had also
been put in place, she said.
"National standards are not about league tables. Don't let
yourselves get sidelined by that debate," she said.
"We all know the great variance in student achievement is
within schools, not between schools.
"We have to balance the right to good information for parents
and boards of trustees, alongside making sure that crude,
misleading comparisons aren't made."
The New Zealand Educational Institute (NZEI) continued its
criticism today, questioning how professional trainers could
successfully train schools to implement the standards when
they were untried and untested.
The system was being "pushed ahead" in the face of growing
concern from parents, teachers, principals and
educationalists, said NZEI president Frances Nelson. The
union reiterated its call for a trial period - something the
Government has dismissed.
"It is interesting that Mrs Tolley is explaining national
standards to those tasked with helping to implement them when
to date she hasn't been able to effectively explain them to
schools or the New Zealand public," Ms Nelson said.
Mrs Tolley referred to a recent New Zealand Herald poll which
said 73 percent of parents were in favour of national
standards.
She said the gap between New Zealand's highest- and
lowest-performing students was greater than other developed
countries and getting wider. One in five young people were
leaving school without adequate reading, writing or
mathematical skills, and that needed to improve
At least 7000 teachers will be trained so they can use the
standards effectively, and another 1200 will be offered
opportunities to study university papers in literacy or
numeracy to improve their content knowledge and understanding
of effective teaching.
Mrs Tolley said teachers would be provided with the support
needed to make systematic changes, and the Government was
making available $36m earmarked in last year's budget to do
so, on top of $26m being spent this year on professional
development.