PQ 3. Education System—Public Achievement Information
3. Education System—Public Achievement
Information
[Sitting date: 24 July 2014.
Volume:700;Page:3. Text is subject to
correction.]
3. Dr CAM CALDER
(National) to the Minister of
Education : What recent announcements has she made
on Public Achievement Information?
Hon HEKIA
PARATA (Minister of Education): Tēnā koe, Mr
Speaker. Today, I was delighted to release the latest public
information from the Ministry of Education on participation
and achievement across the education system, including at
national, regional, territorial, local authority, and school
levels. The information enables all New Zealanders to chart
the progress of all children and young people at critical
times in their educational journey. The Public Achievement
Information released today shows we have more kids starting
earlier, staying longer, and gaining better qualifications.
Dr Cam Calder : How is the reporting of
achievement information useful?
Hon HEKIA
PARATA : It is useful to parents who tell me they
like to see how their kids are doing in relation to others,
teachers who tell me it helps them to accelerate student
progress, and principals who tell me it helps them to know
how their school is doing as a whole and in their community.
It is useful to kids who tell me they like being successful,
to councils that tell me they like knowing how the schools
in their areas are doing and about the link to their local
economy and employment. It is useful to businesses that tell
me this helps them identify opportunities to work more
closely with their schools. Armed with this Public
Achievement Information, we can all work together to help
our kids succeed.
Dr Cam Calder : What
progress is being made on national standards across the
country?
Hon HEKIA PARATA : We have
seen some good progress all over the country over the last 2
years. Fifteen of our 16 regional council areas had
increases from 2011 to 2013 in achievement against national
standards, including gains for Māori students in 14 of
those 16 areas. In the Auckland region, we now know that
around 100,000 children are reported as being at or above
the national standards for reading, writing, and maths in
the 426 schools involved. In the West Coast region over the
last 2 years we have seen a 6.5 percent point increase in
reading and writing. The reporting of this information
involves more than 30,000 teachers in over 2,100 schools
assessing the progress of over 400,000 primary kids. The
overall consistency of the professional judgments made by
these teachers give us confidence we are improving, but we
have got more work to do. I want to thank each and every one
of these teachers. I seek leave—
Grant
Robertson : I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. I
think the Minister may have finally been coming to the end
of her answer, but I do support the notion that she has got
more work to do, though.
Mr SPEAKER :
Order! That is not a useful point of order in any way
whatsoever.
Hon HEKIA PARATA : I seek
leave of the House to table an email exchange between a
staff member of the Ministry of Education and the principal
of Valley School Pukekohe from May this year. This exchange
clearly shows that there was a fuller exchange—
Mr SPEAKER : Order!
Hon
HEKIA PARATA : —than the selective email tabled
in the House yesterday by Chris Hipkins.
Mr
SPEAKER : Order! Order! The rules of Parliament
mean there is a chance to describe the document, not to read
out the content of the document. It is an email exchange
between a principal and a Ministry of Education staffer.
Leave is sought to table that exchange of emails. Is there
any objection? There is none. It can be tabled.
• Document, by leave, laid on the Table of the House.
Chris Hipkins : I raise a point of
order, Mr Speaker. I just want to raise with you the issue
around how that point of order was conducted. There were two
things. One is that the Minister was seeking leave to table
an email exchange, which she is perfectly at liberty to do.
The second is that she appeared to be clarifying answers she
gave in response to my questions yesterday, at the same
time. There is a process to do both of them, and the
Minister is perfectly entitled to do both of them, but she
cannot do the second part as a point of order.
Mr SPEAKER : It is an easy matter to
resolve. The Minister is perfectly able, as is any member,
to seek leave to table a document. If the document is
something that is considered informative to members of the
House, I will then put the leave to the House. It is then
over to the House to decide whether that leave will be
granted or denied. In this case the leave was granted. The
document will be tabled.
Chris Hipkins
: What confidence can the New Zealand public have that the
national standards data she has just referred to are
reliable measures of student achievement when a report
released by her own ministry in September found that
national standards had incorrectly measured the achievements
of four out of every 10 students—40 percent?
Hon HEKIA PARATA : On that member’s
record I would have to see the actual report that is being
referred to for its reliability. What I can you is that the
information we are releasing is based on schools’ own
judgment, their own reporting, and their own data, and I am
backing those teachers, unlike that member.