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Francesca Rudkin: Parents need to step up when it comes to education

Author
Francesca Rudkin,
Publish Date
Sun, 11 Aug 2024, 12:41pm
 Photo / Getty Images.
Photo / Getty Images.

Francesca Rudkin: Parents need to step up when it comes to education

Author
Francesca Rudkin,
Publish Date
Sun, 11 Aug 2024, 12:41pm

I am so pleased my children are almost through their secondary education. I don鈥檛 envy parents of young children heading into the education system now. Education has become so politicised it鈥檚 hard for a parent who doesn鈥檛 have hands-on experience in education to know whether one party鈥檚 evidence-based ideas are good ideas or any better or worse than any other ideas, views and opinions.

When the stats show a constant decline over a long period of time, naturally we lean towards change. It鈥檚 broken so it needs fixing. How we fix it will always have fans and detractors but it鈥檚 better to do something than nothing at all - right?

But you shouldn鈥檛 sell a new idea with fear, and ideally not with opportunism either - it鈥檚 too important for both those things.

When the Government announced the launch of their new maths curriculum last weekend, they produced data they claimed was the impetus for them starting the scheme early. The new data showed only 22 percent of year 8 students were at or above the curriculum level, 15 percent were less than one year below the level and a whopping 63 percent were more than one year below it.

The Prime Minister said this result was 鈥渟hocking but probably not surprising鈥 and was emblematic of a 鈥渢otal system failure鈥.

The data came from a Curriculum Insights report from Otago University that looked at how well students would do against the then draft version of the new math's curriculum, which the Labour Government was planning to launch in 2026. The children were measured on a new curriculum they were yet to be taught 鈥 a curriculum they had not studied yet. Dr Charles Darr, one of the study authors, told 九一星空无限room this week that 'the results showed a change in curriculum and a new benchmarking process rather than a change in achievement.'

You could still argue the results represent how far behind our children are from where we want them to be; but it鈥檚 important to put the data into context.

The state of our education system is a concern for all of us - whether we鈥檙e students, parents, employers or tertiary educators. We do need to turn around declining numeracy and literacy results, so it鈥檚 good to see some urgency. But please stop making parents think most kids are doomed. Heaps of kids are leaving school with a good education and heading off to do amazing things - some involve maths, many don鈥檛.

So let's focus on making sure the changes are well resourced and can be delivered successfully within the short preparation time. There isn鈥檛 as much evidence structured maths works as well as structured literacy and, as we know, kids learn different to each other, so let鈥檚 make sure there is support for the students who don鈥檛 respond to a structured maths approach.

Maybe it鈥檚 also time for parents to step up more as well. It feels increasingly that many parents think teachers are alone responsible for the success of their child鈥檚 education. In reality, success has always been a team effort by the student, teacher and parents - especially when they are young. Hopefully with testing twice a year, all parents will have a better understanding of where their child is at and have the information they need to successfully support their children鈥檚 learning at home.

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