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Working in Partnership to create Learning Environments for the 21st Century. Jude Soper, Principal of ACG International School Jakarta. NEW ZEALAND EDUCATION. New Zealand. There are 4,100,000 New Zealanders - 76.6% are of European origin (Pakeha)
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Working in Partnership to create Learning Environments for the 21st Century Jude Soper, Principal of ACG International School Jakarta
New Zealand • There are 4,100,000 New Zealanders • - 76.6% are of European origin (Pakeha) • - 15.1% are Māori - the indigenous inhabitants of NewZealand • - 9.3% are of Asian origin • - 7.1% are of recent Pacific Islands origin (Samoa, Tonga, Fiji, Cook Is.) • - 88% live in Urban areas — 1.1 million living in Auckland
Government Goals – Education • Schooling • High education standards to provide a foundation for future learning • Increased parent and community engagement • High levels of achievement for all school leavers • Life-long learning skills • Tertiary • A focus on national and regional development priorities • Public confidence in the tertiary sector • Greater financial certainty for government and organisations
Education Priorities - Schooling • All students experience effective teaching • Children’s learning is nurtured by families and community • Evidence-based practice • Focus Areas • Effective teaching • Foundations and knowledge • Parents and family • Strong professional leadership • Teaching and learning in secondary schools • Resourcing • Staying at school • Discipline
Schooling in New Zealand • Compulsory education in New Zealand is divided into primary, intermediate and secondary schooling. • Education is compulsory for all children in New Zealand 6 – 16 years of age • Compulsory Education is free in NZ • Early childhood education is not compulsory, but government subsidies these centres
New Zealand state-funded schools • State schools • Kura kaupapa Māori • Integrated schools • Designated character schools • Independent (or private) schools • Boarding schools • The Correspondence School • Special schools are state schools that provide education for students with special education needs.
Age Progression through the Education System 0-5 years Early Childhood Education 5-12 years Primary & Intermediate School 13-18 years Secondary School 18+ years Tertiary Education and Training Institutions
New Zealand School Curriculum • State schools must deliver New Zealand’s National • Curriculum to students in compulsory education • The New Zealand Curriculum consists of seven ‘essential learning areas’ and eight sets of ‘essential skills’ • The curriculum is specified through sets of expected student learning outcomes called ‘achievement objectives’ • National achievement objectives are detailed in National Curriculum Statements: one for each Essential Learning Area
Overview • We include all forms of post-school education in a unified tertiary education system • Vocational and trades training, foundation education degrees and postgraduate
Structure • Public tertiary education institutions (TEIs) • 8 universities • 20 polytechnics/institutes of technology • 11 Government Training Establishments • 2 colleges of education – but they are being absorbed into universities • 3 wananga • Private training establishments (PTEs) • About 800 + (about 200 get government funding) • Industry training • 41 Industry Training Organisations (ITOs) • Brokers of vocational/trades training • On-job component as well as off job
Summary • The Agenda sets out the government’s vision and strategy for international education in New Zealand 2007 – 2012. • It is linked to the government’s priorities – National Identity and Economic Transformation. • There are 4 goals • New Zealand students are equipped to thrive in an inter-connected world • International students are enriched by their education and living experiences in New Zealand • Domestic education providers are strengthened academically and financially through internationla linkages • New Zealand receives wider economic and social benefits
New Zealand Education provides a holistic education, that gives students the knowledge skills and attitudes to develop as competent, confident life long learners
School Governance - Autonomy with Accountability • Board of trustees has governance role • Principal and staff accountable to board • Board accountable to both parents and government for performance of the school • Board sets out its vision and its undertakings in the school’s Charter • Government publishes national curriculum and national education priorities for schools
The standard constitution of a board of trustees is: five parent-elected representatives the principal a staff representative a student representative (in schools with Year 9 students and above) co-opted trustees .
Boards of trustees: are elected by the School community. • Boards of trustees are Crown entities and are responsible for the governance of schools. Your role, as a trustee, is to ensure that your school is run in the best interests of your students and your community. • Work in partnership with families, communities, principals and teacher to ensure the best outcomes for students
Teacher training Professional Development
Further information • Education Review Officehttp://www.ero.govt.nz/ • LeadSpace – Board and school managementhttp://www.leadspace.govt.nz/knowledge/board_man/index.php • Ministry of Educationhttp://www.minedu.govt.nz/ • New Zealand School Trustees Association (STA)http://www.nzsta.org.nz/ • Sharpening the Focushttp://www.tki.org.nz/r/governance/sharpening/issue8_e.php • Working in Partnership – Information for New School Trustees 2007–2010http://www.minedu.govt.nz/index.cfm?layout=document&documentid=9541