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Saturday, August 9, 2025

Alwyn Poole: Erica Stanford’s solutions to the problems posed by her inner circle have positive aspects …


But they are not the highest priority problems.

I have a son who is a professional fire-fighter. I would imagine that they most basic advice they receive is to point the hose at the fire.

Stanford has done almost nothing on what all data and research show to be the most important aspects for the education of our children and young people. There is barely any water going on the flames.

These are the absolute key areas for the contribution of education towards our future.

1. How to support parenting so that the vast majority of 5 year olds arrive at school ready to fully engage and with the basics of a love of learning, good behaviours, as well as numeracy and literacy in place. This includes parents reading to their children and being fully informed of key aspects of development from conception until 5 years old (at least).

2. Massively improving school attendance. She has allocated just 0.7 of 1% of VOTE education to improving this aspect – that remains in deep crises.

3. How to significantly close the gaps between those who achieve – and those who don’t (concentrated among poorer families, Maori and Pasifika). 2024 school leavers data shows that the proportion of school leavers with no qualifications has risen to 16% for all ethnicities. This is the worst in a decade and it well-and-truly under her watch. It is now 28% for Maori youth. Appalling – but I do not see a single ounce of effort from Stanford on this. Let this statistic land … 28% of Maori youth are leaving school with no qualification. Will the proposed qualifications changes improve this? What are the future consequences?

4. Improving the quality of outcomes of every high school. There is actually some low hanging fruit here with an easy to implement programme. NZ only has 460 high schools. To have every one of them create a 5 year improvement plan for outcomes – aims and how to achieve them – is easy and can be highly effective. I have already been working with some schools on this in a private capacity.

5. Improving the quality of teachers. While there has been some emphasis on this – the impact of poorly consulted curriculum changes, and barely consulted qualifications changes, will have massive work conditions implications for teachers (i.e. chaos). While teachers remain in a collective contract that restricts the ability to reward high contributors – the prospect for true change remains low.

6. The huge hand-brake of a massive and inept Ministry of Education has barely been challenged by Stanford. National/ACT promised to reduce the employment numbers in the Ministry to 2,700 (pre-Hipkins) but it remains near 4,000. Even one of Stanford’s best friends, Tim O’Connor of Auckland Grammar – recently stated that the Ministry serves little purpose and should be disestablished. Stanford has not even been able to appoint a new Secretary for Education – nearly a year after the previous one left.

As someone who fully evaluates the outcomes of our education system each year … the current changes will do nothing to halt the decline – except that students from high performing schools, and privileged demographics, will have a better qualification to get themselves into international study.

Alwyn Poole, a well-known figure in the New Zealand education system, he founded and was the head of Mt Hobson Middle School in Auckland for 18 years. This article was published HERE

Breaking Views Update: Week of 3.8.25







Saturday August 9, 2025 

News:
'Act of racism': Education Ministry cans children's school book for too many Māori words

The Education Ministry has canned a reader for junior children because it has too many Māori words, infuriating Te Akatea, the Māori Principals' Association.

The association's president Bruce Jepsen said the decision not to reprint "At the Marae" was racist and white supremacist.

Insights From Social Media:


Division by race isn’t justice, it’s regression - Dean Melkesideck

Ethnicity-based governance, even framed as consultation, undermines equal citizenship and national unity. Democracies succeed through shared identity and equal laws—not tribal division.

Chris Lynch: St John to axe volunteer hospital programmes.....


St John to axe volunteer hospital programmes, pet therapy, leaving volunteers devastated

St John is axing its volunteer-run pets therapy, hospital volunteers and community carers programmes, a move that has left many long-serving volunteers devastated.

An email sent to volunteers, seen by Chris Lynch Media, outlines the decision to wind down the programmes over the next 10 months as part of a broader restructure in St John’s community health directorate.

Peter Williams: Blurred Lines


It looked like a plea for help, a plea for someone, anyone, to do something about the content of Relationship and Sex Education (RSE) at Queenstown’s Wakatipu High School.

The email arrived from Rodney Hide, one time leader of the Act Party and before that an economics lecturer, now living a quiet life near Queenstown with his second wife and three children, the oldest of whom is a student at nearby Wakatipu High School.

Cam Slater: Labour’s Fiscal Fiasco - Treasury Exposes Ardern’s Economic Sabotage


This report is a wake-up call. Labour’s Covid tyranny wasn’t just about masks and mandates; it was about fiscal vandalism on an epic scale.

The New Zealand Herald dropped a bombshell this week, waving a Treasury report that rips the lid off Labour’s catastrophic mishandling of the economy during the Covid-19 pandemic. The verdict is in: Jacinda Ardern, Grant Robertson and their sidekick Chris Hipkins spent like drunken sailors, ignored official advice, and left our economy in tatters. This isn’t just a bad report card: it’s a scathing indictment of Labour’s fiscal recklessness, a legacy of debt and despair that’ll haunt Kiwis for generations. Ardern’s fairytale book might paint her as some saintly saviour but this Treasury report exposes her for what she really is: an economic wrecking ball.

David Farrar: Labour hypocrisy exposed


When Erica Stanford announced the scrapping of NCEA, Labour said that there hasn’t been proper consultation, and it was all too hasty.

Today we find out that Labour’s supposed Education Spokesperson, Willow-Jean Prime, turned down multiple offers to be briefed on the NCEA change programme. Chris Hipkins was complaining that the opposition wasn’t consulted, and in fact his own spokesperson turned it down!

David Farrar: The Press found to have breached Media Council rules with its school lunches article


The Media Council has upheld a complaint by David Seymour’s office against this article on school lunches. It was found to have breached both the fairness and conflict of interest principles.

The first issue was that they ran the article, and didn’t even ask the Minister for comment. They only quoted opponents of the new school lunch programme.

Mike's Minute: The Treasury report shows why Labour won't win the election


I said earlier this week that the Government will be re-elected next year because, all things being equal, history tends to show you get two terms.

Plus, the Opposition remain the same people who stuffed the place a year and a half ago and the pain of that, the closeness of that, is still real for too many of us.

Friday August 8, 2025 

                    

Friday, August 8, 2025

Ryan Bridge: the treasury's told us what we knew all along


The $66-billion question hanging over Labour's head has been answered.

This new Treasury report tells us what we all already knew about Labour's Covid response.

They went too far. Spent like a drunken sailor. Made it rain dollar bills.

When Treasury advised them to pull back, they didn't they kept going.

Perspective with Heather du Plessis-Allan: Wellington Council doesn't need to fence off the sea


Rare thing to be able to say- but Wellington City Council has just made a sensible decision and voted against erecting a fence along the entire length of Kumutoto and Queen's Wharf.

Now, if you know the part of Wellington that I'm talking about here, it's the area seaside of the TSB Bank Arena and Fergs and Shed 5 and Foxglove and so on.

That whole area at the moment has beautiful concrete walkways that have been laid, lovely seating and lighting and so on.

Matua Kahurangi: The nerve of Hipkins


Complaining about unemployment after mandating it

In a tweet dripping with faux outrage, former Prime Minister Chris Hipkins said:

“So according to Nicola Willis people concerned about rising unemployment are ‘glass half empty’ and people who have lost their jobs ‘shouldn’t take it personally’. Could she be any more out of touch?!

Michael Reddell: Still waiting for a Governor


Today, 5 August, is five months since the shock resignation – or, as now seems much the most likely, engineered exit – of the then Governor of the Reserve Bank, who disappeared from office that very day, getting generously paid for several more weeks but not working until the official date his resignation became legally effective, 31 March.

Centrist: ‘Aotearoa’ declining in popularity, as NZ First pushes name bill

New Zealand First vs Aotearoa first

New Zealand First’s new Member’s Bill to officially declare “New Zealand” as the country’s name has triggered media pushback and parliamentary squabbling. But polling shows the public mood is decisively against the growing use of “Aotearoa” in official settings.

Peter Dunne: Labour and Capital Gains Tax


Albert Einstein apparently once said "insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results."

Earlier this week it was reported that the Labour Party's Policy Council is recommending the Party include introducing a capital gains tax in its policy for the next election. If that recommendation subsequently becomes part of Labour's policy, it will confirm the accuracy of Einstein's alleged comment.

Matua Kahurangi: Erica Stanford - Teachers will no longer mark student work


National’s Education Minister Erica Stanford has revealed a sweeping change that will see teachers relieved of one of their most time-consuming duties: marking student assessments. Speaking on The Duncan Garner Podcast, Stanford confirmed that by 2028, the responsibility for marking both internal and external NCEA assessments will shift entirely to NZQA, and much of it will be done using artificial intelligence.

Kerre Woodham: On the face of it, the RUC announcement makes sense


On the face of it, the announcement from Transport Minister Chris Bishop yesterday makes good sense. It's been signalled; it was National Party election policy to move away from a fuel excise duty to road user charges (RUC). Simeon Brown, who was the transport spokesman at the time, said it would be a fairer way to charge for the distance people drive rather than the amount of fuel they use, given the different nature of the way we drive these days and the vehicles we drive.

Tony Orman: Call to stop the Emission Trading Scheme’s ‘Green War’ on New Zealanders


The Conservative Party has called on the government to repeal the Zero Carbon Act and end the Emissions Trading Scheme and all other climate-focused taxes, subsidies and regulations.

Party leader Helen Houghton made her comments following the resignation of Molesworth Station manager Jim Ward over the uncertainty of the control of wilding pines on the iconic high country station.

Ele Ludemann: RUCs inevitable


Petrol tax will be replaced with electronic road user charges:

. . . Key legislative changes the Government is progressing include: