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4
June 2007
How
Good is our Education System?
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Record
numbers of New Zealanders tuned in to watch TV One’s Dancing
with the Stars last Tuesday as the last two finalists squared
off against each other. The widespread interest in that
contest, as well as other reality challenge shows and sports
in general, demonstrates that the love of competition is
indeed alive and well in New Zealand society.
The
reason, of course, is that every day in every way each one of
us becomes locked into an on-going competitive struggle.
Whether it’s getting ready on time, beating the traffic
congestion, keeping the garden looking good, or winning a
promotion at work, competition is a driving force in our
lives. Competition helps us to identify our ambitions, set our
goals, and it rewards us with the satisfaction of
accomplishment.
That’s
why so many New Zealanders became so worried when Labour
effectively decided to ban competition in schools in 2002 with
the abolition of School Certificate and University Entrance,
and the introduction of the National Certificate of
Educational Achievement. The NCEA is a student-focussed system
which requires schools to set their own curriculum and award
internally assessed credits for achievement. It replaced the
traditional syllabus-based approach, which used external
examinations to benchmark educational standards.
As
a result of these changes, not only has there has been a
dramatic increase in the load on teachers, but the educational
outcome for the student who scrapes through flower arranging,
for example is exactly the same as for the student who excels
in quantum mechanics.
In
an opinion piece “System fatally flawed” in the
Christchurch Press, former teacher Peter Joyce explains it
this way: “At a school where I taught, senior students were
grinding out assessment points in tourism. They astutely
figured out that it is easier to draw up an itinerary for a
fly-drive holiday in Tahiti than to get to grips with the
special theory of relativity. NCEA was supposed to lead to a
concern for real education, as opposed to mere assessment. Not
surprisingly, the opposite has happened. Many students are on
a treadmill of assessment, endlessly crunching numbers and
asking, how many grades
does this count for?"
Peter
goes on to say: “The thinking behind NCEA bears a striking
resemblance to communism. Both are noble theories promoted by
people who really, really care about making the world a better
place. Neither will ever work properly unless millions of
years of human evolution can be unravelled immediately.
Advocates of both dogmas continue to insist, in the face of
failure, that their utopian philosophies have a noble essence
which will one day be revealed to all. In the meantime, both
destroy incentive and promote mediocrity”. http://www.stuff.co.nz/4078663a12935.html
With
dissatisfaction over the NCEA increasing amongst students,
parents and teachers, and more and more schools opting to
introduce alternative external examination systems such as the
Cambridge Examinations and the International Baccalaureate,
the government has been forced to announce a compromise.
This
week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator Steve Thomas, a researcher
with the Maxim Institute - a public policy think tank that has
a particular interest in education issues – explains the
changes in an opinion piece; the
latest NCEA overhaul does not go far enough:
“This
is not to say Mr Maharey’s changes are bad; they are
necessary and welcome. However, more work is needed before the
NCEA can become the rigorous qualification pupils and parents
deserve. Nonetheless, these changes should restore a measure
of confidence in the NCEA among pupils and schools sitting the
qualification. It is only a shame that they have not come
sooner. More significantly, the introduction of a failure
grade and an element of competition for pupils through more
precise reporting of NCEA grades is an admission from the
educrats that, despite their previous claims, the ideology of
standards-based assessment can no longer be defended as a
basis for an excellent ‘world-class’ qualification”. (To
read the article click here
>>>)
These
changes to the NCEA are not the only recent changes to the
education system that are of public concern. The new draft
curriculum, released late last year, introduced a second
language requirement for students in Forms 1 to 4. While this
is not compulsory, one cannot help but wonder if, like the
Kiwi Saver scheme which Labour introduced in a voluntary
manner ahead of compulsion, the second language will become
compulsory and that, because of Labour’s commitment to
biculturalism, the second language will be Maori.
The
curriculum designers have also included some very contentious
value statements in their draft curriculum.
"Diversity", as in "cultures, languages and
heritages" smacks of multiculturalism, a policy which has
contributed to widespread unrest in the UK and Europe.
"Equity", is defined as "social justice",
a term straight out of the Labour Party manifesto:
We want social justice
where everyone can access what they need to reach their
potential, not just those who are rich.
And "care for the environment (the Earth and its
interrelated eco-systems)" is giving ecological issues a
status for which there is no general mandate. (To read the
draft curriculum click here>>>)
But there are other worrying developments.
Just
last month, the Ministry of Education announced that it
intends to allow mathematics students to use
“super-calculators” that can solve equations, not only in
the classroom but in exams as well. As a former maths teacher,
I believe this move exposes the dire situation that
mathematics teaching is in. While there are many excellent
maths teachers in New Zealand, they are, unfortunately few and
far between. But rather than addressing this critical skills
shortage in a proper manner, our education masters have
decided that the simplest answer is to disguise the problem by
allowing children to use advanced technology.
When
my own children were at primary school and having difficulty
with mathematics, we developed Zenith, a simple number skills
game that made learning fun. As a result of playing the game
their mathematics skill and confidence levels improved
dramatically. Both went on to do maths and science courses at
university, an option that is currently being denied to many
New Zealand children who do not understand basic mathematical
concepts due to poor teaching. (To find out more about Zenith
click here>>>)
The
reality is that an understanding of mathematics is essential
for everyday living, including being able to run a household
budget with out getting into debt! It is also vitally
important in developing an understanding of economics and how
the government’s budgets work. Former Labour Minister Hon
Michael Basset, in this week’s Political Opinion expresses
it this way: “Tens of thousands
of students leave school with no understanding of economic
realities. At a time like now when an overheated exchange
rate, sliding manufacturing output, and a declining job market
bite into people’s lives, greater understanding about which
political steps can produce beneficial outcomes, and which are
no more than short-term, feel-good measures, would help the
country big time. People might even understand that continuing
poorly-targeted government spending has actually contributed
to today’s problems. Instead of urging ministers to reach
for the regulators’ manual, or to increase spending,
they’d be more likely to endorse easing off, especially if
they knew about the statistics showing that recent huge
increases in spending on health, education and welfare have
produced little improvement in outcomes, helping instead, to
fuel the inflation that worries Dr Bollard who keeps interest
rates high”.
http://www.michaelbassett.co.nz/articleview.php?id=120
Ensuring
children get the best education possible is an important
responsibility of any government. It is especially important
in New Zealand where the government dictates which state
school that parents must send their children to, and prevents
parents from using their child’s education entitlement
funding to send their child to an independent school.
The
poll this week asks: Do
you agree or disagree with the critics of the NCEA that
educational standards in New Zealand are falling. Take
part in poll >>>
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