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The shambolic story of National Standards

The debate over National Standards continues to simmer away, but the conversation is changing. If you listen carefully there is no real opposition to the general concept of National Standards – which is the reporting of student progress to parents. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
18 October, 2013

World class education? Why New Zealand must strengthen its teaching profession

Why is NZ shedding talented teachers? NZ has a high quality but unequal education system  It fails too many Māori and Pasifika students, with wide gaps in performance Policies to attract, retain and develop talent are needed to tackle the problem This report, written by John Morris and Rose Patterson, identifies the critical junctures where teaching quality can be influenced, and the organisations that have the power to strengthen the teaching profession. Read more

John Morris and Rose Patterson
7 October, 2013

Media release: Why is NZ shedding talented teachers?

Wellington (7 October 2013): While national standards, charter schools, and class sizes have dominated the education debate, research by The New Zealand Initiative shows teacher quality is the most important in-school factor influencing student achievement. But as the World Class Education? Read more

7 October, 2013

Does passion trump experience in education?

Should New Zealand be letting inexperienced and unqualified teachers loose on children in our toughest communities? That’s exactly what Teach First is doing. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
20 September, 2013

Schools banning hundreds and thousands

Before you start thinking that there is a radical new health or safety (or better still, health and safety) measure in place to ban hundreds and thousands biscuits in schools, a more serious matter is at stake: are schools banning hundreds and thousands of students? This matters, because OECD data shows that school systems that transfer disruptive students out of schools, as a system, tend to perform lower and are less equitable. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
13 September, 2013

Reading into reading recovery

This week, Massey University Professors James Chapman and Bill Turner released a highly critical report of the Ministry of Education’s strategy for improving children’s literacy. In essence, they argue that the strategy has failed. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newletter
9 August, 2013

Teach a family to fish

It’s a story teachers often lament: Children bringing behavioural and emotional problems to school, without shoes on their feet or food in their bellies. Research in 2005 estimated that 10% of children in New Zealand go without breakfast. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
26 July, 2013

Get smart - use a computer

Last week I heard a 60-something-year-old talk about getting some files out of his ‘machine’. I imagined some kind of futuristic filing cabinet but it turns out he was talking about his computer. Read more

Rose Patterson
12 July, 2013

Media release: Nick Cater and The Lucky Culture come to New Zealand

The New Zealand Initiative is bringing Nick Cater to New Zealand to launch his book The Lucky Culture on 15 July in Wellington, 16 July in Auckland and 17 July in Christchurch. The Lucky Culture and the rise of an Australian ruling class, published by Harper Collins, is a bold and provocative book about Australia’s national identity and how it is threatened by the rise of an aspiring ruling class. Read more

10 July, 2013

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