Election Funding, Education, Pragmatism
Election Funding, Education, Pragmatism
Maxim Institute
- real issues - No. 278
8 November
2007
www.maxim.org.nz
Raiding the public purse
New
curriculum about to hit schools
Politics, philosophy and
pragmatism
IN THE NEWS
Going Further With Fathers
Seminar
Britain considering leniency for
abortions
America embraces adoption
RAIDING THE PUBLIC PURSE
A new Bill tabled by Government this week would
allow taxpayer dollars to
be used (again) to finance
political parties' election advertising for next
year's
election. The Appropriation (Continuation of Interim Meaning
of
Funding for Parliamentary Purposes) Bill, introduced
on Monday is likely to
be pushed through Parliament
without opportunity for public submission.
After the
election overspending by political parties in 2005 (who
can
forget the pledge card debacle?), Government passed
legislation that
retrospectively legalised their conduct,
a requirement that did not condone
their behaviour, but
was required under the Public Finance Act.
That
legislation expires on December 31 of this year; it
was never intended to
legalise using public money for any
future elections. But the new Bill
would continue to
permit using taxpayers' money for messages most of
us
would think of as political, over the period of the
next election.
Appropriation bills are not required to go
through the Select Committee
process, so the concern is
that this legislation will be passed before the
end of
the year, without any public say.
The Bill would provide a
narrow definition of 'electioneering,' so narrow
in fact
that advertising, which for all intents and purposes is
election
campaigning, would not fall within it. So as
long as the advert does not
explicitly request votes,
money or people to join a party, it could be
considered
as being for a 'parliamentary purpose' and paid for with
public
money. Adverts that say, for example, 'Here's the
Purple Party's record on
health' or 'The Purple Party
cares about the elderly,' could thus possibly
be paid for
by the taxpayer.
This Bill would be an abuse of both power
and process, especially when
combined with the equally
disastrous Electoral Finance Bill. The combined
effect
would be an incumbent government able to access public money
to
communicate with the public, whereas interested
members of the public would
be severely limited in what
they can say and what they can spend of their
own money.
Parliament needs to be more responsible with taxpayers'
money.
It belongs to us all as a collective whole, and
should be managed
conscientiously and with
integrity.
Read the Appropriation (Continuation of Interim
Meaning of Funding for
Parliamentary Purposes)
Bill
http://www.parliament.nz/NR/rdonlyres/2DC1B339-8C91-43F2-9BA6-FB9AE4AC92BF/68400/DBHOH_BILL_8335_5533.pdf
NEW CURRICULUM ABOUT TO HIT SCHOOLS
After several years of
development, the Ministry of Education has at
last
presented the revised New Zealand Curriculum,
providing more flexibility
for schools to teach a series
of core values and principles. There are
still some
nagging problems with the philosophy underlying the
curriculum,
however, and it still faces the final test
--- actually being used in
schools.
On the positive
side, the new curriculum is slimmer, bringing together
the
content and objectives for the eight 'learning areas'
(subjects) into one
document. Consequently, the new
curriculum is less prescriptive, and more
like a
framework, giving schools and teachers clear 'statements
about
priorities, expectations and outcomes for each
learning area.' Setting
clear expectations for teachers
and pupils is a big part of effective
teaching and
learning, and the curriculum does this well. The
new
curriculum also gives more guidance to teachers,
helping them to engage
pupils in learning and spur them
to higher levels of achievement.
Nevertheless, blind spots
and shortcomings remain. Reflecting progressive
theories
of teaching and learning, the curriculum prioritises
personalised
learning over the reality that learning
involves engaging in an objective
taught body of
knowledge, which is imparted from the teacher to the
pupil.
The curriculum's vision to see children become
'lifelong learners' who are
'actively involved' in their
learning are outcomes of education in its
broader sense,
rather than an adequate picture of what schooling should
be
like. Further, while many of the values listed are
positive, a moral
foundation for them is lacking. In the
case of equity and diversity, they
are arguably
contradictory.
It is now the job of schools and teachers
to make sense of the new
curriculum. No doubt learning
lessons from the botched implementation of
the NCEA, the
Ministry of Education is promising workshops and support.
The
curriculum has also highlighted that teachers may
need to change their
teaching practice to really help
raise pupil achievement, which is one of
the reasons for
the new curriculum in the first place. As the
curriculum
is launched on its voyage, it is entrusted to
teachers; without superb,
well paid teachers who can
impart information and skills, the curriculum,
and indeed
the education system would be lifeless.
POLITICS, PHILOSOPHY AND PRAGMATISM
Throughout the Western world,
the spin doctors are on the march, and sudden
flip flops
abound from all quarters of the political spectrum.
Enthusiastic
embraces of tax cuts, furrowed concern about
climate change, jettisoning of
grammar schools, frowning
over fireworks --- political leaders spare no
effort to
be seen as hip, trendy, in touch and concerned. It
appears
today's principle is tomorrow's fish and chip
paper as we do politics by
focus group, government by
opinion poll, and political debate by sound
bite.
The
art of politics is the balance of pragmatism and principle.
The measure
of a statesman is the adaptation of
unchanging principles to what Edmund
Burke called 'the
circumstances'; a gradual and slow persuasion of the
body
politic, based on shared social values and the
common good. The strength of
good political thought has
always been its ability to adapt its unchanging
view of
constant human nature, human imperfection, and institutions
to a
variety of different circumstances and conditions,
whether it be Disraeli's
embrace of household suffrage or
Sir Robert Peel's waltz with free trade.
The challenge,
then, for all politicians is the articulation of a
coherent
philosophical position, with a demonstration of
how that vision applies to
the concerns and worries of
people at the time.
Modern politics falls down when
politicians skip the principle bit, and
instead ask
opinion polls to tell them what they ought to think.
Pure
pragmatism and populism without principle cheapens
political debate, and
clouds vision. The idea of
Parliament is the containing of diverse
interests in a
common whole, a process of expressing and working
through
our differences. Serving the common good requires
that our representatives
debate even unpalatable issues,
and the process of representation, dissent,
debate and
discussion, even of truths inconvenient or unpopular, is a
key
part of our Western tradition. We should require of
our leaders that they
tell us what they really think,
even if it swims against the flow, or is
not approved by
the latest poll. The rush for the 'centre ground,'
the
photo-shopping, focus-group driven plastic politics
which is becoming
increasingly common ignores the real
purpose of the political process,
which is persuasion, a
contest of visions, ideas and policies; an
exploration of
the deep and troubling issues facing our country.
Politics
is not just about pragmatism, but about
principle, philosophy, policy, and
the things that
perplex the body politic. It is this kind of politics
New
Zealand has the right and duty to expect and to
foster.
GOING FURTHER WITH FATHERS SEMINAR
Daniel Lees,
a researcher at Maxim Institute, will be presenting
the
results of his literature review of the unique
contributions that fathers
can make to their children's
lives, at a public seminar in Auckland. The
review,
published recently in Going Further With Fathers, looks at
how
fathers can make a difference in their children's
lives. Places for the
seminar are limited and
registration is required.
Read invitation details for
Going Further With Fathers
Seminar
http://www.maxim.org.nz/index.cfm/links/gfwf_invitation
BRITAIN CONSIDERING LENIENCY FOR ABORTIONS
The Commons Science and
Technology Committee in Britain has released a
report
suggesting changes to the existing system for abortions.
Britain's
current law prohibits abortion, unless two
doctors verify that the woman's
situation meets certain
criteria, for example proceeding with the pregnancy
will
cause her physical harm. The report is the result of an
inquiry into
the Abortion Act 1967, and its proposals
include allowing abortions to be
performed at home, by a
nurse or a midwife, and that the need for two
doctors'
consent be removed.
The Committee says that its inquiry
has 'focused only on the scientific,
medical and other
research evidence,' rather than any moral or
ethical
issues. It is difficult to see, however, in a
debate centred on abortion
how morals and ethics can
ever, or should ever, be removed.
Read the Commons Science
and Technology Committee
Report
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200607/cmselect/cmsctech/1045/1045i.pdf
AMERICA EMBRACES ADOPTION
This month is National Adoption Month in
the United States. The month is
about recognising those
families who have adopted children or who care for
foster
children, and encouraging more families to become involved
and adopt
a child. The theme for this year focuses on
adopting teenagers who are in
care, highlighting a large
challenge that the United States is facing in
how to help
these teens become part of a settled, loving and
accepting
family. While New Zealand is not celebrating
adoption in this way, it is
worth us remembering that we
too have many children in the care of CYFS, in
need of a
stable home and a caring environment. The difference that
can be
made by opening up our homes to even a single
child is huge, helping to
give them a future, a hope, and
most of all a loving family.
TALKING POINT
'A man full
of warm, speculative benevolence may wish his society
otherwise
constituted than he finds it, but a good
patriot and a true politician
always considers how he
shall make the most of the existing materials of
his
country. A disposition to preserve and an ability to
improve, taken
together, would be my standard of a
statesman. Everything else is vulgar in
the conception,
perilous in the execution.'
Edmund Burke 1729 - 1797
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