https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PA2304/S00165/moe-needs-stop-micromanaging-and-start-measuring.htm
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MOE Needs Stop Micromanaging And Start Measuring
Thursday, 27 April 2023, 9:31 am
Press Release: ACT New Zealand
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“New Zealand is facing a slow-moving train wreck as
students just disengage from school. A lack of
accountability from a bloated education ministry means New
Zealand kids won’t receive the opportunities in life they
used to,” says ACT’s Education spokesperson Chris
Baillie.
“Newstalk ZB reports almost 10,000 students
aren’t enrolled in Primary School anymore, an increase on
the 6,300 reported last year.
“Labour is still
blaming COVID-19, with Ministry officials saying Omicron is
the cause of the decline. Everyone knows this is nonsense,
since the spike of the pandemic truancy has gotten
consistently worse. There were 40 per cent more cases of
truancy last year than there was in 2021.
“Despite
the Ministry of Education exploding in size – FTEs are up
55.3 per cent since 2017 – it still can’t get kids to
show up at school. In fact, it’s being rewarded for its
failures by being given more money and staff. How is it that
the education ministry can hire so many extra people and
achieve such appalling outcomes? Because it is focussed on
pushing nonsense like ‘teaching
maths for social justice’ instead of measuring
outcomes. It needs to get back to basics and let schools
teach.
“The Government is warning that parents who
don’t ensure regular attendance may face prosecution.
Great, but it’s hard to take them seriously considering
only one parent has received a fine in the past five
years.
“We need accountability. That means mandatory
daily attendance reporting and fines for parents who refuse
to send their kids to school, as set out in ACT’s truancy
plan released in November.
“Labour has no ideas to
arrest the decline. They want to keep on blaming COVID-19
until they can find another excuse. ACT has
solutions:
- Daily national attendance
reporting: The Government treated COVID like a
crisis and maintained a national focus on the pandemic with
daily case, hospitalisation, and death numbers for over two
years. Truancy is also a crisis with long term consequences.
ACT will require every school in New Zealand to fill out an
electronic attendance register accessible by the Ministry of
Education. Schools will be required to record which students
have not attended school on a particular day and whether
that absence was justified or unjustified. The Ministry will
publish daily attendance in real time, building a national
focus on the issue.
- Empowering schools to
deal with truancy: Schools should be empowered to
deal with poor attendance through direct, cashed-up funding.
The Government spends $38.5 million on truancy services and
ACT says it should be given to schools to use for hiring
their own truancy officers. The funding would be weighted to
the Equity Index, so schools with more vulnerable student
populations would receive more funding. For example, a poor
school with 600 students could have an allowance of about
$113 per student for $67,800 hiring an attendance officer. A
group of smaller schools could band together to hire their
own officer.
- Traffic light system:
Collection of data will be connected to a traffic light
system. This will set out clear expectations for the
responsibilities of everyone relating to unjustified
absences. Green light, high attendance (up to 10% absence).
Require schools to attempt to make contact with a family on
the day of an unjustified absence. Orange light, irregular
attendance (10-30% absence) The school will be required to
hold a meeting with the student and family and develop a
plan to reintegrate the student back into the classroom on a
regular basis. Red light, chronic absenteeism. (more than
30% truant). Children will be referred to the Ministry of
Education to deal with, who will make a decision on possible
actions including fines and referral to
Police.
- An infringement notice regime for
parents: Currently parents cannot be fined for
student non-attendance without a court conviction, but they
can be fined on the spot for speeding to school. ACT would
change the Education and Training Act to allow the Ministry
of Education to introduce an infringement notice regime for
truancy. Ensure Police use section 49 of the Education and
Training Act to work with schools on truants and to take
children they see out of school during school hours to
either the school or home.
- Accountability
for schools through mandatory reporting: Schools
would be required to report their attendance daily to a
Ministry of Education database. Most businesses need to
prove they have delivered before they are paid, but schools
do not have to report whether their students actually
attended school. Under ACT, schools that fail to report
would risk losing their funding.
“Almost every
aspect of someone's adult life will be defined by the
education they receive as a child. If we want better social
outcomes for New Zealand, we can’t keep ignoring the
truancy
crisis.”
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