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Is the story a country tells about itself true?

Around the world: The evolution of teaching as a profession is The New Zealand Initiative’s second education report. Released this week, it is the product of a six-week tour around the world to look at how other education systems deal with teacher quality. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
13 December, 2013

New Zealand’s PISA shock

This week’s 2012 PISA results should have sent shockwaves down the country. New Zealand slipped from 7th to 13th place in reading, 13th to 23rd in maths, and from 7th to 18th in science in the OECD’s Programme of International Student Assessment (PISA), a study of half a million 15-year olds in 65 countries. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
6 December, 2013

Media release: NZ’s ‘PISA shock’ a signal for change

Wellington (4 December 2013): New Zealand’s sudden drop in the international education rankings is a clear signal that the country needs to lift teacher quality if wants students to be able to participate in the modern workplace, said The NewZealand Initiative. Compared to the 2009 results, 15 year olds saw their overall ranking in the Programme for International Student Assessment (Pisa) fall across the board, dropping from 7th to 13th in reading, 13th to 23rd in mathematics, and 7th to 18th in science. Read more

4 December, 2013

Catastrophic consequences

One in seven of New Zealand’s 15-year-olds cannot read at a level considered requisite for basic participation in society, according to the 2009 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) study. But does this simply reflect natural variation in ability levels and the left-end of the bell curve? Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
22 November, 2013

The dreaded parent-teacher interview

This week a friend attended a parent-teacher interview to discuss her 6-year-old daughter’s progress in school. The teacher started off not with reading, writing, or maths, but with a comment on her character that would puff up any parent’s chest with pride: her daughter is a delight to have in the classroom. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
1 November, 2013

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

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

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