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'Stop our children being a political rugby ball': Teacher's message to candidates

Author
Laura Smith,
Publish Date
Thu, 28 Sep 2023, 2:43pm
The NZEI conference education panel of Jan Tinetti, Erica Stanford, Merepeka Raukawa-Tait, and Teanau Tuiono answered members' questions on Wednesday. Photo / Laura Smith
The NZEI conference education panel of Jan Tinetti, Erica Stanford, Merepeka Raukawa-Tait, and Teanau Tuiono answered members' questions on Wednesday. Photo / Laura Smith

'Stop our children being a political rugby ball': Teacher's message to candidates

Author
Laura Smith,
Publish Date
Thu, 28 Sep 2023, 2:43pm

A Tauranga teacher is pleading for children to stop being used as a 鈥減olitical rugby ball鈥.

Primary school teacher Vanessa Millar spoke to representatives of four political parties at the NZEI Te Riu Roa annual conference, Hui-膩-Tau, held in Rotorua.

鈥淲hat are your plans to stop our children being a political rugby ball, by making education a cross-party political space?鈥

LDR_STRAP

The panellists were candidates Jan Tinetti of the Labour Party, National鈥檚 Erica Stanford, Merepeka Raukawa-Tait of Te P膩ti M膩ori and the Green Party鈥檚 Teanau Tuiono.

Millar鈥檚 question received cheers and applause from education colleagues in the audience.

Matua Primary School teacher Vanessa Millar. Photo / Alex Cairns

Matua Primary School teacher Vanessa Millar. Photo / Alex Cairns

She later told听Local Democracy Reporting听that she asked the question as she believed tamariki (children) were 鈥渂eing failed鈥 by constantly-changing policies and the lack of a shared vision was 鈥渄estroying our future鈥.

Tinetti, Labour鈥檚 education spokeswoman and a former school principal, answered Millar first.

鈥淚鈥檓 all for it, I鈥檓 sick and tired of it being a political football, I always felt like that when I was in the sector.鈥

听鈥淥ur kids are too precious, education should be an area where politics don鈥檛 come into it. Other jurisdictions do it.鈥

Labour Party Tauranga candidate and Education Minister Jan Tinetti was on the panel. Photo / Laura Smith

Labour Party Tauranga candidate and Education Minister Jan Tinetti was on the panel. Photo / Laura Smith

鈥淲e do not want untested, untried, populist ideas being forced on our kids that are going to create more harm.鈥

National Party education spokeswoman Stanford鈥檚 response was that it was good to have a contest of ideas, no matter the sector. She said debate was healthy.

National Party education spokeswoman Erica Stanford. Photo / Laura Smith

National Party education spokeswoman Erica Stanford. Photo / Laura Smith

鈥淣o-one speaks with one whole voice.鈥

Stanford said she had been careful in the policy she put forward for it to not be 鈥渢erribly different鈥.

Raukawa-Tait said cross-party work for the benefit of children 鈥渁in鈥檛 gonna happen鈥.

Te P膩ti M膩ori Rotorua candidate Merepeka Raukawa-Tait. Photo / Laura Smith

Te P膩ti M膩ori Rotorua candidate Merepeka Raukawa-Tait. Photo / Laura Smith

鈥淧arties are quite selfish. They think about themselves, they think short-term and are constantly scanning the world for the best ideas and solutions... we鈥檝e got people who want to share their ideas.鈥

Green Party education spokesman Tuiono agreed with Tinetti: 鈥淚 reckon we should give it a shot.

鈥淚f we get enough parties around the table, maybe we can get somewhere.鈥

Other questions at the event focused on other听听had faced in recent times, such as pay parity and resourcing.

Green Party MP Teanau Tuiono. Photo / Laura Smith

Green Party MP Teanau Tuiono. Photo / Laura Smith

In a nutshell: Education policies

National Party

Includes banning cellphones in schools, requiring all primary and intermediate schools to spend an average of an hour a day each on reading, writing and maths, a curriculum re-write to set out a non-negotiable set of knowledge and skills children will need to be taught each year, and exit exams for graduate teachers.

Labour Party

Includes continuing school lunches, making financial literacy compulsory in schools from 2025, mandating teaching methods for reading, writing and maths from 2026, and providing 鈥済uidance, professional development, and materials鈥 to help teachers implement the new rules.

Green Party

Includes ending classroom streaming or grouping by perceived ability, trialling alternative models of school governance to improve inclusivity and self-determination in education, resourcing the universal teaching of te reo M膩ori and tikanga M膩ori in all public schools, establishing a unit within the Ministry of Education designed to support schools, and the education system in general, to respond to the voices of children.

Te P膩ti M膩ori

Includes resourcing and valuing kaupapa M膩ori education including by establishing a $200m fund to drive wh膩nau, hap奴 and iwi education and training initiatives, overhauling the mainstream education system including by requiring a minimum of 25 per cent of the education budget be directed to M膩ori models of delivery and pastoral care and remove the power of schools to expel any student younger than the school leaving age of 16, as well as creating pathways for school leavers such as by permanently removing apprenticeship fees.

Laura Smith is a Local Democracy Reporting journalist based at the听Rotorua Daily Post. She previously reported general news for the听Otago Daily Times听补苍诲听Southland Express, and has been a journalist for four years.

-听Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ on Air

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