Report’s vision a “weird mix”
Report’s vision a “weird mix” - PPTA
The newly released Vision for the teaching profession report is a “weird mix of gold and dross,” PPTA president Kate Gainsford says.
PPTA applauded the report’s emphasis on promoting teaching as a high status profession, attracting the best candidates for teacher education, high quality induction and mentoring for beginning teachers and ongoing professional learning, Gainsford said. “These are the kind of goals that underpin much of PPTA’s work, including our current position in the collective agreement negotiations.”
Unfortunately the report also showed a worrying level of
ignorance about the New Zealand Teachers’ Council,
Gainsford said.
“It recommends ‘refocusing’ the
role of the Teachers Council, and then describes a future
role that is exactly what the Council does now.”
The
report alleges that direct representation of teacher unions
on the council “may lead to emphasis on employment
conditions and industrial matters rather than professional
leadership”, but Gainsford described this as “nonsense.
“PPTA’s representatives on the council have always
demonstrated strong leadership in professional matters and
their contribution is highly regarded,” she said.
There
were some good recommendations in the report and some that
lacked a sense of practical knowledge about schools and
teachers’ workloads.
If, for instance, the
recommendation that teacher education consist of three years
postgraduate study - the last two of which were done
part-time as a beginning teacher - was implemented under
current workloads, the proportion of teachers leaving by the
end of their second year would rise from the current 15% to
nearer 50%, she said.
The report’s “kite flying” about introducing performance pay for teachers also showed ignorance of the various failed attempts internationally to implement such schemes, Gainsford said. “More often than not such schemes are nothing more than a capping mechanism on teachers’ pay.”
ENDS