Educating for a successful, innovative society
Early childhood education.
$61 million over four years on
the operating budget, $5 million on the capital budget, to
improve access to quality early childhood
education.
Compulsory education sector.
Increase in per
pupil funding to schools of 2.2 per cent.
$292 million
capital budget for the 2002-03 year.
$72 million over the
next four years to increase primary school staffing.
$4.5
million over four years to attract more secondary teachers.
Broadband initiative [Also features in the growth and
innovation package.]
Nearly $7 million over four years to
develop a digital learning product in collaboration with
Australia.
An extra $2.8 million over four years to Te
Kete Ipurangi ¡V New Zealand¡¦s on-line resource
centre.
$1.3 million in 2002-03, $2.57 million in
outyears to develop teachers¡¦ technology skills.
An
additional $1.5 million a year for children¡¦s literacy
materials.
$5.3 million over four years to extend
literacy and numeracy assessment tools.
$6.8 million
over four years in teacher-related NCEA initiatives.
Tertiary education and skills training.
$400 million
over four years, including:
„h $94.272 million for
research in the tertiary sector.
„h $21.277 million to
manage the transition to the Tertiary Education
Strategy.
„h $214.3 million for a 4.5 per cent increase
in per student funding.
„h $41 million to increase Modern
Apprenticeship places, $14 million for industry training and
$7.2 million for the Gateway school-to-work programme.
Pre-releases:
$1 million in 2002-03 and $2 million a
year thereafter in grants available to polytechnics
providing courses tailored to their local
economy.
$484,000 to the SNAP programme next summer:
this helps match skilled tertiary students with skills
shortages on the job market.
$5.2 million over four
years to improve the support for special needs
students.
A further $8 million over four years to
implement the Adult Literacy Strategy taking total funding
to over $53 million.
$25 million over five years to lease
laptops for secondary school teachers.
$3 million over
four years to fund in-depth literacy professional
development programmes in secondary schools.
$775,000 to
fund a comprehensive 15-month review into the regulatory and
funding systems for early childhood education.
Pacific
education package: $1.2 million over four years to further
work by the New Zealand Qualification Authority with Pacific
peoples; $126,000 over two years for the professional
development of Samoan language teachers; $412,000 over four
years for Anau Ako Pasifika, a home-based early childhood
education programme.
$2.1 million over four years for
kura kaupapa teachers.
$350,000 a year from 2002-03 for
the Young New Zealanders¡¦
Challenge.