Principals Survey An Accurate Reflection Of Top Concerns
A national survey of secondary principals which found the top issues facing schools were providing support for vulnerable students and recrutiing quality teachers, is an accurate reflection, says Kate Gainsford, Chair of the Secondary Principals’ Council.
“Three years of
COVID disruptions, increasing concerns about climate change
and the relentless influence of social media has resulted in
increasing numbers of our students feeling vulnerable and
anxious.
Stress, depression and anxiety cannot be
left at the school gate and are not conducive to
learning.
“Helping rangatahi realise their potential
and giving them the knowledge, skills and opportunities they
need to live their best lives are what principals live for.
Schools will pull out all stops to help students who are at
risk and in need.
We need more pastoral staffing in
our schools to work with vulnerable students and their
families and alternative education services to help them as
much as possible to stay engaged with education
–
once they disengage it’s often very difficult
to get them back.”
Kate Gainsford said the report had correctly idenitifed teacher recruitment as another burning issue for principals. “There are serious problems with recruiting graduates into secondary teaching.
She was not surprised that the report found many principals were concerned about the management of the NCEA and curriculum changes. “The support and resourcing has been slow and piecemeal and teachers and ākonga deserve much better.
Of course schools are doing everything they can to make the best of a sub-optimal situation. I sincerely hope that the voices of concern will begin to be heard. We all need to be able to have absolute confidence in our national curriculum and qualification.”
The pressure of these issues on principals aligns with the finding that only nine percent find their workload managable. “Acute issues with vulnerable students, endless recruitment and having to untangle the NCEA change process chews up
the hours in a day, leaving many principals working long hours to keep up.More structured and systematic support for leadership as well as resolving issues with the teacher shortage would go a long way to m ake workloads more managable.”
Teacher perspectives from NZCER’s 2023 national survey of area schools | New Zealand Council for Educational Research