- Acting principal Peter Thorne criticises ban on teacher-only days during term time calling it a 鈥渒ick in the guts.鈥
- - Associate Education Minister David Seymour outlines new truancy measures, including potential prosecution of parents.
- - Concerns arise about the effectiveness of prosecuting truancy, as issues are often complex.
The acting principal of Belmont Primary School on Auckland鈥檚 North Shore has labelled a move to ban teacher-only days during the term a 鈥渒ick in the guts鈥 for
As part of a crackdown on student , Associate Education Minister David Seymour yesterday said teacher-only days during the term won鈥檛 be allowed and has asked Ministry officials to monitor compliance of the rule.
Seymour threatened fines for schools that didn鈥檛 adhere.
鈥淚 have directed the Ministry to take a more active role in the prosecution process. I reserve the right to look at an infringement scheme in the future if this approach doesn鈥檛 work.鈥
Speaking to 九一星空无限talk ZB鈥檚 Mike Hosking this morning, David Seymour said that students, teachers, the Government and the school all played a part in accountability.
鈥漊ltimately, we just get the data.鈥
He urged schools to 鈥渢ake this seriously鈥.
Under current rules, teacher-only days are supposed to be held out of term time, unless authorised by the Education Ministry.
However, Belmont Primary School acting principal Peter Thorne said teachers are regularly busy with classroom commitments during the holiday period.
鈥淭he initial response is that it鈥檚 a bit of a kick in the guts. We see our teacher-only days as a real valuable tool where we can get together and focus on our professional needs and the needs of the students.鈥
Peter Thorne is acting principal at Belmont Primary School on Auckland's North Shore. Photo / Alyse Wright
He didn鈥檛 believe taking one or two teacher-only days during a year would reduce truancy.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know why a teacher-only day would have any impact.鈥
Thorne said there鈥檚 been a lot of talk from the Government about valuing teachers and stripping their ability to decide when to take teacher-only days amounted to 鈥渄evaluing the profession鈥.
President of the Secondary Principals鈥 Association of New Zealand Vaughan Couillault was also unsure how dictating when staff can take a teacher-only day would improve absenteeism.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think our absentee rate is significantly disadvantaged because a school takes a teacher-only day.鈥
Spanz president Vaughan Couillault is also principal of Auckland's Papatoetoe High School. Photo / Dean Purcell
He wanted more information about the plan saying there is flexibility about when schools start and finish a school year, and because of this, some schools are open more than the required number of days.
He said if it was the case that schools would be penalised for having a teacher-only day during the term, even when they鈥檝e hit their required open days, it wouldn鈥檛 make sense.
鈥淭hat would be unfortunate and negates the need for flex at the beginning of term one and the end of term four. I鈥檓not quite sure what the Minister鈥檚 motivation is there. The devil will be in the detail,鈥 he said.
Monitoring of teacher-only days will come into force in 2026 along with a mandatory requirement for all schools to introduce an attendance management plan.
Seymour said teacher-only days can鈥檛 be taken 鈥渨illy nilly鈥, explaining it鈥檚 at the discretion of the Education Ministry.
鈥淚f the teachers aren鈥檛 showing up it鈥檚 pretty hard to motivate the students to turn up.鈥
When pressed on the issue, he said his concern was about student education.
鈥淲e are not here primarily for teachers. We are here for students and the future of this country,鈥 he said.
Parents giving the 鈥榤iddle finger鈥 to the system
Seymour said too many parents were giving the 鈥渕iddle finger鈥 to the system when it came to their and there needed to be consequences.
鈥淚鈥檝e talked to a tenant officer who have repeatedly tried to contact parents. They鈥檙e being ignored, they鈥檙e being told school is not important that they don鈥檛 want to engage,鈥 he said.
Asked whether he鈥檇 had more than one report of such an issue, he said it was 鈥渜uite widespread鈥.
Associate Education Minister David Seymour announces the new truancy rules in Auckland's Botany. Photo / Alyse Wright
He said from the beginning of the school term in 2026 and a new 鈥渟tepped attendance response鈥 or what was called a Star system would be mandatory in schools.
鈥淎ny student who reaches a clearly defined threshold of days absent will trigger an appropriate and proportionate response from their school and the Ministry,鈥 said Seymour.
He said the response would depend on the severity of the situation.
Some examples of how interventions could work are:
- Five days absent: The school to get in touch with parents/guardians to determine reasons for absence and set expectations.
- - 10 days absent: School leadership meets with parents/guardians and the student to identify barriers to attendance and develop plans to address this.
- - 15 days absent: Escalating the response to the Ministry and steps to initiate prosecution of parents could be considered as a valid intervention.
Couillault said prosecuting parents could make already established problems worse.
鈥淎t the moment, schools in New Zealand need to lead a prosecution if there are (cases of) condoned truancy. People like me are reluctant to lead the prosecutions because we鈥檙eactually trying to restore a learning relationship.鈥
He said while having Government-run prosecutions would remove a faceoff between a school and parents, he wanted to understand if fines and prosecutions had been successful in reducing absenteeism overseas.
He said there was a difference between truancy and absenteeism and in most cases, students were absent because of which were 鈥減retty decent reasons not to be at school鈥.
鈥淚 would like to think that Minister Seymour is referring to the unexplained, the unjustified and the active truant as opposed to your children and mine who might have had five days off in term one because they had a nasty cold.鈥
Thorne was also sceptical about the Minister鈥檚 attendance crackdown, telling the Herald there are varied and sometimes complex reasons why children don鈥檛 attend school.
He said staff worked hard to build positive relationships with parents of truant children and threats of prosecution would be damaging.
鈥淔rom my point of view, I don鈥檛 think that鈥檚 going help the situation at all.鈥
He also wondered who was going to be in charge ofmonitoring the new system.
鈥淔rom what I understand there鈥檚 no extra resource to help the schools. That鈥檚 what we鈥檇 want 鈥 extra resource so we can have a person in the position that could focus on truancy.鈥
Michael Morrah is a senior investigative reporter/team leader at the Herald. He won the best coverage of a major news event at the 2024 Voyager NZ Media Awards and has twice been named reporter of the year. He has been a broadcast journalist for 20 years and joined the Herald鈥檚 video team in July 2024.
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