INDEPENDENT NEWS

Mallard Sentences Kids to Another Year of NCEA

Published: Fri 9 Aug 2002 02:24 PM
Mallard Sentences Kids to Another Year of NCEA
Friday 9 Aug 2002
Parents, teachers and children will greet the news that NCEA will steamroll ahead with horror, ACT Education Spokesman Donna Awatere Huata said today.
"Trevor Mallard is determined to steamroll ahead with his ideological changes to our examination system without a care for the chaos in our schools.
"Mr Mallard is disregarding the 83 percent of teachers who strongly believe NCEA should not continue in its current form.
"Mr Mallard's decision sentences children to receiving a valueless, meaningless qualification that has no respect from employers in New Zealand or abroad.
"Mr Mallard today criticised kids for taking too many credits. They are doing so because the NCEA is such a dumbed-down system. Mr Mallard's expectation that many schools will only offer external assessment next year shows what little faith educators have in the NCEA. It shows that schools clearly want an external model that Mr Mallard refuses to deliver.
"This decision reinforces an elitist, unfair system - if your mum and dad can afford to send you to an independent school with a decent qualification instead of the NCEA, you're going to get a massive head-start.
"I am bitterly disappointed that United Future cares so little about education that it did not fight to even review NCEA.
"There is clearly no party in Government or supporting it which is committed to lifting standards in the classroom," Mrs Awatere Huata said.
Ends

Next in New Zealand politics

Maori Authority Warns Government On Fast Track Legislation
By: National Maori Authority
Comprehensive Partnership The Goal For NZ And The Philippines
By: New Zealand Government
Canterbury Spotted Skink In Serious Trouble
By: Department of Conservation
Oranga Tamariki Cuts Commit Tamariki To State Abuse
By: Te Pati Maori
Inflation Data Shows Need For A Plan On Climate And Population
By: New Zealand Council of Trade Unions
Annual Inflation At 4.0 Percent
By: Statistics New Zealand
View as: DESKTOP | MOBILE © Scoop Media