Students Start New Year in Crammed Classrooms
Media Release
28 Jan 2008
Students Start New Year in Crammed Classrooms
Many parents relieved to be sending their kids back to secondary school may be less pleased to find them in classes of more than 30.
PPTA president Robin Duff however is hopeful a promised Ministry staffing review will help address the issue of overstretched classes by putting more resources towards those who teach them.
According to a 2007 Windshift survey on parents’ perspectives of secondary school teaching, most want each subject teacher to spend at least 15 minutes one-on-one time per week with their child. Currently though, students in average-sized classes can expect fewer than four minutes.
“Classes of 30-plus students are helping contribute to a situation where a number of young people are falling through the cracks,” Mr Duff said
The PPTA believes the
average maximum class size should be 25 students, and fewer
in practical classes where there are health and safety
risks.
Parents in the Windshift survey would like to see
them down to between 20 and 25.
For the first time,
thanks to the 2007-2010 Secondary Teachers’ Collective
agreement, teachers have contractual protections around
average class sizes.
However the requirement for schools
to endeavour to provide class size averages of 26 for
teachers with two or more classes needs Ministry-level
support to work effectively, Mr Duff said.
Mr Duff hopes a secondary staffing review promised by Education Minister Chris Carter last year will focus on encouraging more graduates and skilled tradespeople into secondary teaching, addressing the subject shortages schools are suffering and limiting class sizes.
“Improved staffing resources will
mean more students will have the chance to work in smaller
classes, and that can only be good for them,” Mr Duff
said.
“By eliminating large classes the Government
will help create greater engagement in learning and more
opportunity to cater for diversity and difference. It will
give teachers the chance to pay greater attention to each
individual student”.
Other benefits from smaller classes were better monitoring of student progress, earlier diagnosis of student difficulties, higher levels of physical safety and students feeling more positive about themselves, he said.
“We have been promised that the issue of staffing would be addressed for quite some time and are looking forward to seeing it happen,” he said.
ENDS