The front page of the DomPost features an article making the claim that new entrants are increasingly turning up to school lacking reading, writing and life skills.
Foxton's Coley St School principal Richard McMillan said about 80 per cent of this year's new entrants did not know how to hold a pencil, had no letter knowledge, poor book knowledge, and did not know how to look after themselves.
"Some do not even have basic life skills like eating properly and washing hands."
The school provided special remedial support programmes, while other schools used teacher aides.
"There are too many young parents lacking basic parenting skills not reading to their children, not talking to them, teaching them basic hygiene."
He believed the problem was more prevalent in lower socio-economic rural areas.
New Zealand Educational Institute president Frances Nelson said new entrants' readiness varied across the country. Children who had not had early childhood education tended to be less prepared.
"Unfortunately, it's increasingly in [poorer] low-decile areas where access to preschool education is not so easy to come by.
"Hawera Primary School head Neryda Sullivan said new entrants were increasingly not meeting basic benchmarks described in the Education Ministry's Literacy Learning Progressions. Many were missing early indicators, "like reading from the front to the back of a book and realising illustrations relate to text".
Deputy principal Shevaun O'Brien said 19 of 36 of the school's new entrants rated below average last year. "People are under a lot of time pressure everyone is so busy."
Principals Federation president Ernie Buutveld also said access to early childhood education was likely to be a factor. "It may also suggest families need two incomes, and probably there is less time being spent doing some of those things being done in the old times."
But he added that families in which both parents were working were more likely to send their children to pre-school.
So there is a contradiction there. Pre-school helps prepare for school. That is indisputable. The both-parents-work excuse doesn't wash with me. Busy people tend to apply their effort across all endeavours.
Nobody is saying it so I will. Much of the problem - not all of it - stems from welfarism. A laziness and apathy pervades many beneficiary homes. It may be that there are mental problems that need resolving. Then again I think much of the diagnosis of stress and depression is driven by the don't-blame-the-victim mentality.
There are 177 on the DPB in Foxton. That'll represent about 300 children. Not all of them at school of course. Coley St School has a roll of around 270. Another 250 children go to other Foxton Schools. I think it would be safe to estimate one in three Foxton children is from a home where nobody goes out to work. Homes where there should be ample time to spend interacting with the children. Yet studies show that welfare recipients talk less to their children.
But getting back to the comments from those interviewed. If nobody names the problem, how are we ever going to fix it?
Word of the day
1 hour ago
6 comments:
OK teachers have a right to expect that new entrants have basic life skills, but reading and writing and how to hold a pencil, that surely is the job of the teacher.
It drhear people sayignt hat because famileies need two incomes there isn't enough time to read to kids etc etc etc. Complete bullshit. Both my wife and I work, and have she was back at work a only a couple of months after the kids were born. We always managed to read to the kids, and get them fed, cleaned and to bed at 7pm when they were pre-school.
The kids referred to in the article come from homes where any sort of social advancement is not seen as a priority. School is for six hours of child-minding and getting the kids out of the hair of the parent(s).
Not sure what happened at the start of my last comment. Should read "It drives me spare to hear people saying that becaue...."
Sorry. Finger-keyboard-brain disconnect.
Yeah right; Mark and bringing up kids is the job of the State. I wonder how they go with knife and fork? It just makes you want to cry.
This is a really interesting issue. When my kids were little I volunteered as teacher aide at our local school, and teachers often complained new entrants had no social skills and could not relate to adults. They tended to be overly aggressive and could not concentrate for more than 5 minutes.
Teachers said the daycare environment was to blame - too many kids of the same age all lumped in together.
So I think the problem is probably exacerbated by DPB on one hand, and daycare on the other.
"too many kids of the same age all lumped in together"
That is one of the fundamental problems of the entire schooling paradigm.
Anyone who claims to believe in freedom should think carefully about their attitude to the compulsory internment of innocent children.
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