Can anyone unravel for me the Labour party position on education, particularly charter schools (whatever they are). I'd like to be able to square the circle around what the Leader and the Maori spokesman have had to say on the subject recently.
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Can anyone unravel for me the Labour party position on education, particularly charter schools (whatever they are). I'd like to be able to square the circle around what the Leader and the Maori spokesman have had to say on the subject recently.
Andrew Little has made the charter school policy very clear. Those schools not teaching the curriculum or using registered teachers, would be closed.
http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/politi...schools-policy
In any case, there don't appear to be many charter schools, probably under 10, and many of the backers seem to be religious groups.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charte...in_New_Zealand
Kelvin Davis is putting forward an idea on testing the concept of Maori values being used in a prison, suggesting it could be tested in the existing Northland prison. It is not Labour policy leading up to the election. http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/ar...ectid=11852278
Rod Oram quits: Fairfax editors disagreed with Rod Oram's take on the merger decision last weekend, and in any case he'd had his word numbers reduced for the SST items on the rear of the business pages. He has resigned from the job, but will reappear somewhere else. This is a shame for the SST, it's the main reason I still bother with a subscription, and I find most of the other articles less than enlightening/poorly researched.
http://www.radionz.co.nz/audio/playe...o_id=201843153
Ah! Charter schools become "Special Character schools".
Problem solved.
;)
These special character schools might have building programmes, farm programmes, but they'd also teach the syllabus and use registered teachers, that sounds fine.
Another opinion writer that needs to stay onboard: Shamubeel. Note how the older policies are similar to Labour's KiwiBuild, and they worked.
http://www.stuff.co.nz/manawatu-stan...ousing-history
I wouldn't think that the incidence of such behaviour is as high amongst trained and screened teachers, as in the general population. It's probably a lot better in fact. But even NZ charter schools are required to screen staff. It's the teaching training I'm concerned about. It's a tricky but privileged job teaching young adults.
You would have. And more-so nowadays. There are large numbers of teachers who are semi-illiterate; can't spell and have no knowledge of English grammar and in many cases cannot do basic arithmetic without a calculator. All power to charter schools or any system that can provide a higher standard of the basic three Rs. There is massive room for improvement.