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Report: NZ's Primary School Staffing Model "a Barrier To Achieving The Goals Of A Modern Education System"

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Thu Jun 10 2021 12:00:00 GMT+1200 (New Zealand Standard Time)

Report: NZ's Primary School Staffing Model "a Barrier To Achieving The Goals Of A Modern Education System"

Thursday, 10 June 2021, 9:57 am
Press Release: NZEI

A landmark report released today recommends bold changes to staffing in New Zealand primary schools to address equity issues preventing our children reaching their potential.

NZEI Te Riu Roa invited an independent panel of education experts, chaired by Steve Maharey, to conduct the Pūaotanga review. The report says that current staffing is not fit for purpose, and that children are missing out due to high student-teacher ratios, teachers' lack of time to adequately prepare for teaching, and inadequate specialist staffing resources.

NZEI Te Riu Roa President | Te Manukura Liam Rutherford believes the sector will welcome the report:

"In their submissions to the panel, educators delivered a consistent message - that they are stretched to the limit, and that significant change is needed to address their needs and our children's.

"Educators are in this line of work because they love it. They're passionate about seeing tamariki succeed and do well. But for years now, they've said their workloads have been increasing and that it's getting harder to meet their students' increasingly diverse needs.

"The report released today shows clearly that our current primary staffing model is inadequate: that right now, with the resources available to them, it's just not possible for our country's educators to give each and every child the support they need to achieve their potential.

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"While this is awful to hear, I hope that the people who work in our schools find it validating."

Key recommendations include increasing classroom release time to give teachers and teacher aides more time for planning, lowering student to teacher ratios so teachers can spend more time with each student, providing additional, centrally funded learning support resource to ensure all students' needs are met, and providing additional targeted resource to strengthen Māori and Pasifika education.

"We welcome the review's recommendations to address these issues head on. Much of what the report suggests reflects what educators have already been asking for, but with the added benefit of data-driven analysis, and the added weight that comes from an independent perspective.

"Teachers, learning support, support staff and principals now have a template for a path forward from here, with clear steps to take now, and in the short and medium term by 2030. As our members head into pre-negotiation union meetings for their collective agreements later this month, this report will provide them with crucial guidance on where to focus their energy."

Highlights from the Pūaotanga report:

Teaching recommendations

Learning support recommendations

Additional recommendations:

The reviewers said that "Of particular concern [was] the need to ensure that Māori are able to be Māori as they progress through their educational journey; that the Pacific learner can learn as a person of their culture; that children with disabilities have no barriers to inclusion; and that, no matter where a child lives, they can access the best possible educational experience."

About Pūaotanga

NZEI Te Riu Roa commissioned Pūaotanga at the start of this year. The Review has been conducted by an independent panel of education experts: Steve Maharey, Whetū Cormick, Dr Cathy Wylie, and Peter Verstappen.

The final report captures over 2,650 written submissions and the oral evidence from six hui across Aotearoa. The Panel's recommendations to Government are based on the experience and voices of educators, parents, academics, and sector groups and set out a pathway to better primary education for all our tamariki by 2030.

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