PQ 6. Students—Management of Behavioural Issues
6. Students—Management of Behavioural Issues
[Sitting date: 29 July 2014. Volume:700;Page:5. Text is subject to correction.]
6. TIM MACINDOE (National - Hamilton
West) to the Minister of Education : What recent
announcements has she made on schools addressing difficult
behaviours of students?
Hon HEKIA PARATA (Minister of Education): Today I was pleased to announce that student stand-downs, suspensions, and exclusions have reached 14-year lows. Early leaving exemptions have dropped by 89 percent between 2006 and 2013. Since 2008 there have been 4,700 fewer stand-downs, a reduction of 24 percent; 1,292 fewer suspensions, a reduction of 30 percent; and 300 fewer exclusions, a reduction of 22 percent. Under this Government we are seeing far fewer kids being removed from school and more students staying longer and gaining better qualifications.
Tim Macindoe : What approaches are being taken to help pupils stay at school longer and leave better qualified?
Hon HEKIA PARATA : We have a range of
initiatives investing into safe and positive school
environments to keep kids at school longer, and there are
more educational pathways to choose from so that they can be
successful. They include, for example, a $145 million
investment into Positive Behaviour for Learning school-wide
programmes, which will involve 800 schools by 2017; a $15
million investment by the Prime Minister’s Youth Mental
Health Project initiatives for youth resilience programmes;
a much improved nationwide integrated attendance service;
and more kids are leaving with National Certificate of
Educational Achievement (NCEA) level 2 results through a mix
of very targeted support and options such as trades
academies coupled with clear vocational pathways that are
seeing kids getting NCEA level 2 because they can see the
practical application of their learning. More kids are
starting earlier, staying longer, and leaving better
qualified under this Government.