Traditional schools, even the most liberal, have their premises in a past industrial age.
Industrial aged schools |
The dream of mass education has turned, for
far too many of our students into a nightmare. One size never fits all and to accommodate
this dilemma schools have sorted, streamed, and grouped their students. This
worked well when there were manual jobs for the academically unqualified but
today such jobs are no longer available.
There is an obvious need now to transform schooling to fit
the new post-industrial environment.
The business philosopher Peter Drucker has
written that the first country to develop a 21stC education system will win the
future and ideas expressed in the numerous video presentations
of creativity‘guru’ Sir Ken Robinson point the way. New Zealand could well be such a winner
if education were not just to be reformed (‘tinkered’ with) but transformed
into personalised system able to realize the powers of all students.
Sir Ken Robinson |
So far the current Government ignores such visions
preferring to standardise education around a narrow range of National Standards
(leading to, after the elections, to national testing and league tables) with
the consequence that creativity and innovation have been limited.
In the New Zealand Principal (March 2014) there is an
inspirational article about New Zealand educational development from 1939 to
present day contributed by Prof John Clark, Massey University School of
Education.
It is his thesis that a fundamental principle of educational
policy, developed in 1939, was abandoned in 1990 and that since then education
policy has been held hostage to unprincipled pragmatism and that now the time
has come for a re-asserting of a principle that has the ability to capture the
imagination of all involved in schooling; a principle that provides a
personalised education for all students and also the common good of our
community as a whole.
In 1939, after years of social inequality caused by the
Great Depression, the First Labour Government (1939-49) introduced a range of
social reforms to bring social justice for all in s
ociety and not just for the
advantaged elite.
Fourth Labour Govt 1939-49 |
The Labour Manifesto’s education policy of the time made it
clear what was expected in education and when elected Peter Fraser, Minister Of
Education, asked the Director of Education Dr Beeby to rewrite the then
Ministry of Education report to the new government to capture his ideas.
Overnight Beeby wrote the following principle:
‘…that every person
whatever his level of academic ability, whether rich or poor, whether he lives
in the town or the country, has a right as a citizen to a free education of the
kind best fitted and to the fullest extent of his power……(and that this ) will
involve the reorientation of the education system.’
This orientation was in conflict with current principles of
secondary selection of students and the
primary school emphasis on the 3Rs – an education that suited the well to do
and academically able and penalised students from the poorest families. The new
policy asked for:
‘Schools that are able
to cater for the whole population must offer courses that are as rich and
varied as are the needs and abilities of the children who enter them…..to be
true equality of opportunity… to convert a school system constructed originally
on the basis of selection and privilege to a truly democratic form..’
This this principle, if not fully put in place, lasted
ironically until the Fourth Labour Government (1984-90) rejected it putting in
its place the unbridled power of choice in the market which widened inequality
and, since then, writes Prof Clark, ‘under successive governments we have
witnessed the growth of economic inequality as the rich get richer and the poor
became poorer matched by a corresponding increase in the inequality of school
achievement along the lines of wealth and poverty’.
Dr Beeby |
Time now for education, writes Prof Clark, to become
principled again so that all government polices ‘pass the test of social justice
and equality for all. Against this the policy of national standards is to be
judged.’ It would seem we suffer in
education not an ‘achievement gap’ but more an ‘opportunity gap’ created to a
large extent by the effects of inequality. For all students to succeed it just
can’t be left to teachers – the inequalities that determine failure need to be
faced up to something the current government is loath to do. School effects on student success, according
to valid research would indicate the school effect being in the 10 to 30%
range. High paid itinerant ‘super’ principals and teachers won’t solve this
disparity.
Prof Clark believes the opposition Labour Party’s education
policy has the making of a principle that once more captures the vision of the
first Labour Government stating that Education ‘is a priority for us because a good education provides our children
with a life time of opportunities….’.
This Clark believes is a start but ‘far more is required if
the country is to regain what it has lost; a principle that benefits all rather
than the few’. To succeed the Labour Party’ must return to its roots of
equality for all’.
Equality of opportunity is not to aim for standardisation
(the current emphasis is on conformity) but for all students to be helped to
realise their innate powers – their unique gifts and talents. This requires
personalised approach to education.
National standards have had the effect of returning us to
the emphasis prior to 1939 on the 3Rs with the poor continuing to be penalised.
Future education must, writes Clark, ‘reconcile the
conflicting interests of the freedom of the individual to pursue their own
legitimate interests with the responsibility of the community through
the state
to seek the common good of all by providing for their general welfare as
citizens of a caring society.’ ‘This’, he continues, ‘places education as an
end which all else serves as a means. Nothing can be greater than education our
children to become good people who, as good citizens, live in a good society.
All other policies – economic, health, security and he like – serve as a means
of achieving this ultimate ends’.
Achieving this balance of freedom and common good needs to
replace the current ideology of self-interest with minimal government
involvement through the’ invisible hand’ of the market, will be hard to
achieve. This was also the challenge
faced up to in 1939 by the First Labour Government following the market crash
on 1929.
All involved to achieve this new balance must be aligned
with the challenge- politicians, policy makers, teachers, parents and
employers. A free education for all is required to ensure all students realise
their innate potential; an education that provides the opportunities to realize
this for all students, needs to underpin a future Labour led coalition.
‘The biggest problem in New Zealand today’, writes Clark,
‘is the growing inequality of school achievement’ National Standards is the
current government’s answer to the problem of underachievement but Clark
believes that they have yet to demonstrate success.
National Standards place great faith on
within school factors ignoring out of school factors such as ‘poverty, poor
health, inadequate family resources, dysfunctional families, and social
ills….and the inability of parents … to support their children in successful
learning.’ This is not even to consider the effects of standards narrowing the
curriculum and in the process reducing students’ opportunities to succeed in
other areas of the curriculum.
‘In short’ Clark writes, ‘if schools are not the cause of
the problem then neither are they the solution to it. The way out is to rethink
the matter: the causes of inequality which flows through all our social fabric
with such devastating effect on individuals and at such huge cost to the community
at large.’
‘Something other than National Standards is required’. The
recent concept of appointing ‘super teachers and principals also ignores the
effects of out of school factors and would, if
Narrowing effect of standards. |
What is required, according to Clark, is a passionate
reforming Minister of Educations and a Director of Education driven by a deep
need to change as was the situation in 1939.
Such a reforming Minister would need to look beyond the
expertise of the current Ministry of Education as Peter Fraser did in 1939 and
would need also to look beyond the school where the real causes of inequality
lie. Clark writes that such a Minister, ‘must look outward to be advised by
those within and without the system, for the problem and its solution span widely
across the economic, health and welfare spheres which are interlocked in
complex and mutually Then, and only then, will the Minister of
Education and the Government be fully appraised of the severity of the problem
and the enormity of the solution.’
Success will be measured by the ability of the Government to’ convey its
principle and polices in ways which are of benefit to one and to all.’
A time for new ideas. |
Clark concludes by drawing attention to the two opposing
ideologies on offer.
The National Government holds that the wealth of the nation
belongs solely to individuals who have the freedom to acquire and utilize their
resources as they see fit and if returned inequality will continue to grow ( we
wait for wealth to ‘trickle down’), privatisation of public services such as
schools will spread and environmental
sustainability will be given lip service.
‘On the other hand if we are of the view that the nation’s
wealth is
just that, the wealth of the nation for which each one of us is a
custodian acting in the best interest of all will lead us to adopting principles
and approving polices which work not only for the individual but also, more
importantly, for the common good of all.
A clear choice |
As Lester Flockton writes, in the same magazine, it is a
choice between the ‘current, neo liberal ( free market, profiteering, competitive,
capitalist) direction of education policy in our country’, creating a country of winners and losers, or
a government ‘committed to social justice ‘ that values the talents and
contributions of all.
A simple choice if we think hard about it.
( I may have misinterpreted Prof Clark’s idea – check out
his article in the March 2014 Principals Magazine)
1 comment:
Thank you very much for this article. It is timely as there is no longer a choice to be complacent in the face of the changes being forced on education in New Zealand. I take the point to be that simply resisting is also pointless. We need to take on the mantle of leaders and become champions of the principals of democracy and social justice in education.
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