Why is NZ shedding talented teachers? - NZ Initiative
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Why is NZ shedding talented teachers?
•
New Zealand has a high quality
but unequal education system.
•
It fails too many
Māori and
Pasifika students, with wide gaps in
performance.
•
Policies to attract, retain and develop talent
are needed to tackle the
problem.
Wellington (7 October): While national standards, charter schools, and class sizes have dominated the education debate, research by The New Zealand Initiative shows teacher quality is the most important in-school factor influencing student achievement.
But as the World Class Education?
Why New Zealand Must Strengthen its Teaching Profession
report shows, many educators are demoralised by the
structures in which they work, the low social status of the
job, and the lack of talent recognition within the
system.
“New Zealand has a very good education system,
but by failing to recognise the value teachers bring,
we’ve ended up with a very lopsided profile of student
performance,” said Dr Oliver Hartwich, executive director
of the Initiative.
“On one hand we have very high
performing students who rank among the best in the world.
But on the other, there are pockets of students who are
being left behind not only in the core areas of reading,
science and maths, but in every other measure as
well.”
In brief, the research found:
-
NZ has one of the largest gaps in the world between high-
and low-performing students, with Māori and Pasifika
students consistently less successful than Pakeha and Asian
students
- the quality of teacher education
is variable – only 57% of schools are satisfied with the
quality of teacher graduates
- teacher
morale in secondary schools slipped from 70% in 2009 to 57%
in 2012.
Dr Hartwich said the need to attract quality graduates into the profession is increasingly pressing as the aging teaching workforce nears retirement age.
“We need to give the profession the recognition it deserves if we want to attract the best and brightest graduates and hold onto our position at the top of the education rankings,” he said.
World Class Education? Why New Zealand Must Strengthen its Teaching Profession is written by the former headmaster of Auckland Grammar School John Morris and The New Zealand Initiative research fellow Rose Patterson.
It will be followed later this year by a report on how the top education systems in the world are tackling similar challenges.
The third report, expected in early 2014, will draw on these international policies to explore how New Zealand’s teaching profession can be strengthened.
The event will be launched at a fully booked event in Auckland, but a limited number of spaces are available for media.
KEY MESSAGES
Why is NZ shedding talented teachers?
• NZ has a
high quality but unequal education
system
• It fails too many
Māori and
Pasifika students, with wide gaps in
performance
• Policies to
attract, retain and develop talent are needed to tackle the
problem
This report, written by John Morris
and Rose Patterson, identifies the critical junctures where
teaching quality can be influenced, and the organisations
that have the power to strengthen the teaching profession.
This is the first in a series of three reports, which
will use comparative research to explore how leading
jurisdictions attract and retain world class teaching
talent, and how these policies can be applied to
New
Zealand.
NZ is a top-performing
system
• NZ’s 15-year-olds rank among the
top performing countries in reading (7th), science (7th) and
mathematics (13th)
• NZ (along with Shanghai and
Singapore) has the highest proportion of top readers (one in
six)
But the system is not reaching
everyone
• NZ has one of the largest gaps in
the world between high- and low-performing students
•
The 2009 PISA study of 15-year-olds showed NZ has one of the
widest ranges of reading scores in the OECD
• Māori
and Pasifika students are consistently less successful than
Pakeha and Asian students at all three levels of NCEA and
they do not perform as well in international tests of
achievement
Teachers are the education system’s
most valuable asset
• A meta-analysis of half
a million studies found teachers were the most important
in-school factor for student achievement
• Teacher
salaries make up 61% of the education budget
NZ
has good quality teachers, but we can improve in key
areas
• Our teachers are highly qualified -
86% hold a bachelor’s degree
• But one-third of year
nine mathematics teachers do not have a mathematics
qualification
• 18% of schools say a lack of
mathematics teachers hinders the ability to teach the
subject
• The quality of teacher education is variable
- only 57% of schools are satisfied with the quality of
teacher graduates
• Low expectations of Māori and
Pasifika students are partly to blame for low achievement
We struggle to attract and retain talent
• Despite the importance of teachers, their status in
NZ is low, and has been eroded by top-down changes
•
Teacher morale in secondary schools slipped from 70% in 2009
to 57% in 2012
• Teacher appraisal is a ‘tick the
box’ exercise. It is rarely used as a tool for development
and only 5% of teacher goals are related to student
outcomes
• There is a lack of career structure and
recognition of excellence. The pay scale sends a signal that
teachers have reached their maximum capability after eight
years
Why this matters
• As the
ageing teaching workforce moves into retirement, we will
need to refresh the teaching pool
• Furthermore, we
need to attract the best and brightest into the profession
if we are to lift student achievement from its current
level
• Much of the problem lies with the system, not
teachers, and this where the focus should fall
• All
stakeholders, including the unions and government, have an
important role to play in lifting the quality of our most
important education resource
Report: TNZI_World_Class_Ed_Low_res.pdf
ENDS