Education Minister under fire from Māori leaders
WEDNESDAY 4 JULY 2018
Leading Māori educators
claim closure of Partnership Schools | Kura Hourua is in
breach of the Treaty of Waitangi
Sir Toby Curtis and
Dame Iritana Tawhiwhirangi yesterday lodged a Treaty of
Waitangi claim alleging that the Crown’s actions in
closing Partnership Schools | Kura Hourua will have a
disproportionately detrimental effect on Māori.
Sir Toby said the claim was important because the large majority of the 1500 students at the schools that are being shut down are Māori, many of whom have enrolled in these schools to get a fresh start in education and get their lives back on track. Six of the eleven Kura Hourua currently in operation have between 87% and 100% Maori rolls.
“The rights of these students to make that choice and the rights of parents and whanau to choose and support what’s best for their children are being taken away from them”, said Sir Toby.
He said the Government’s plans to offer Kura Hourua the chance to re-establish themselves as regular state schools would not solve the problem.
“What it would do is to strip the schools of the key flexibilities that were allowing them to succeed. Students would be left with no choice but to either leave school or return to a state system that wasn’t working for them in the first place.
“Yes, we have a good state education system, but it doesn’t serve all students’ needs equally well. Results across the country clearly show that one size does not fit all”, said Sir Toby.
Dame Iritana took particular issue with the Crown’s total lack of consultation with either the schools or their student’s families and whanau.
“This Government has ridden roughshod over the futures of these young people in spite of claiming that they are placing a priority on helping our most vulnerable children.
“The evidence shows that Kura Hourua have been delivering very positive results for Māori students who for decades have been falling through the gaps.
“Despite years of trying, the state education system has failed to close the gap between Māori and Pasifika learning success and that of all other New Zealanders. Yet here we have eleven schools that have been open for less than four years making the difference we have been looking for, and here the Government is closing them down. It just makes no sense at all”, Dame Iritana said.
Sir Toby said that the Treaty of Waitangi provides a principled framework that is easy to understand and that we can all respect.
“The principles of partnership,
reciprocity, active protection and equity are derived from
the Treaty, and provide a good foundation for us all to work
from”, he said.
Sir Toby Curtis, Te Arawa,
Ngati Rongomai and Ngati Pikiao, was knighted in 2013 for 45
years of service to education. A former teacher, he held
senior roles at Hato Petera College, Auckland Teacher's
College, Auckland Institute of Technology and Auckland
University of Technology. He chaired the Iwi Education
Authority for tribal immersion schools, was instrumental in
establishing Maori broadcasting and served on Te Wananga o
Aotearoa Council and the Partnership Schools/Kura Hourua
Authorisation Board.
Dame Iritana Tawhiwhirangi is of Ngāti Porou, Ngāti Kahungungu and Ngāpuhi descent. A former teacher and a leading advocate for the Kohunga Reo movement, Maori language education and Māori development, she was awarded the DCNZ for services to Māori education in 2009. Dame Iritana was a member of the Partnership Schools/Kura Hourua Authorisation Board from its inception.
ENDS