New working classes
5:30 AM Saturday Aug
27, 2011
Hospitality Academy student Michael Makiha, 16,
makes sausage rolls at Southern Cross Campus in Mangere. Picture /
Richard Robinson
Sweeping changes are transforming high schools to ensure
thousands of pupils who will never study for degrees get the skills
to find valuable careers, writes Simon Collins.
New Zealand secondary schools are quietly being redesigned in a
way that could make them dramatically more relevant to young people
who are not heading towards university.
It's a subtle change - grouping about 6000 unit standards and
achievement standards that can now count towards the National
Certificate of Educational Achievement into five broad "vocational
pathways".
But, if the plan works, its effects could be enormous. For the
first time in a generation, the two-thirds of young people who will
never study for a degree could see clear paths to other valuable
careers.
"We are talking about a fundamental shift in the nature of the
senior secondary school," says Dr Stuart Middleton, director of the
Centre for Studies in Multiple Pathways at Manukau Institute of
Technology.
"We know purpose is always key to success," he says. "It's only
in the last 30 years that we have lost the sense of why we go to
secondary school. Students who are heading towards university have
never lost their purpose, but the thing that is missing for a lot
of other students through their secondary school years is a sense
of where they are going in terms of employment, of 'what am I going
to be?"'
Symptoms of failure
A report by the New Zealand Institute last month crystallised
the way our system is failing. At age 15, it said, Kiwi youngsters
are among the best in the world at reading, maths and science. Yet
many then lose interest and drop out, giving 15-to-19-year-olds a
bigger share of total unemployment here than in any other developed
nation.
The drop-outs are disproportionately poor and brown. Only 8 per
cent of European 15-to-19-year-olds, and 4 per cent of Asians are
not in employment, education, training or caregiving. But 9 per
cent of young Pacific people and 15 per cent of Maori youth are
apparently doing absolutely nothing constructive.
"If only Pakeha and Asian students went to school in New
Zealand, we'd perform at the top of the world," says Middleton. "If
only Maori and Pacific students went to school in New Zealand, then
Turkey is the only country that [would] perform worse. And if you
look at the demographics of New Zealand and the age profile of
different ethnic groups, that's a huge wake-up call."
How it happened
Things used to be different. Until the 1970s, New Zealand's
urban secondary schools were divided into colleges and grammar
schools for the academically-minded and technical high schools,
which led others into apprenticeships or directly into low-skilled
jobs.
In the generation since then, two things have changed. First,
technology and free trade have wiped out many low-skilled jobs and
state agencies such as the Post Office and the Ministry of Works
that used to train apprentices for industry have been dismantled
and sold off. For a while apprenticeships almost disappeared.
At the same time, the old class division in secondary schools
began to seem unfair and was abolished. Every technical high school
became a comprehensive college and most students were channelled
into academic work.
The numbers of students entering high school who stayed for a
full five years rose from less than 10 per cent in 1970 to 65 per
cent by the mid-2000s. Yet only 32 per cent go on to study towards
a bachelor's degree by age 19.
A decade ago, NCEA was meant to fix things by giving schools a
wide range of vocational and competency-based "unit standards" to
choose from alongside "achievement standards" based on the core
curriculum.
But the new system simply bamboozles many youngsters. Josh
Williams, the Ministry of Education's manager for youth guarantee
initiatives, says schools offered 5776 different unit standards and
740 achievement standards last year.
Careers advisers, who might be expected to guide students
through this maze, are hard to find. Peter Kemp, a careers adviser
at Marlborough Boys' College and member of the Post-Primary
Teachers Association executive, estimates that fewer than 20 of the
country's 300 state secondary schools have full-time careers
advisers.
"Many schools regard it as a low priority and provide minimal
staff time for it. The average works out at around eight hours a
week for every 1000 students," he says.
The ministry's flagship study of New Zealand students, Competent
Children Competent Learners, found in 2008 that 41 per cent of
16-year-olds had never talked to a teacher or careers adviser about
their future options.
The result is that many students study a patchwork of subjects
that are no use to anyone.
"We have too many students now who end up with a
supermarket-style NCEA," says Middleton. "They wander through the
aisles picking goods off the shelf. That is not the way to get a
balanced diet."
New pathways
Industry training organisations, which write and approve unit
standards, were the first to suggest simplifying the system. Last
year they proposed grouping all unit standards into broad sectors,
with common "entrances" to jobs in each sector.
Universities, they said, already had a clear entrance threshold:
42 credits at NCEA level 3 with minimum literacy and numeracy
requirements. (This will rise in 2014 to 60 credits at level 3 and
20 at level 2 or higher.)
"Ideally every student and every school should know the formula
for getting into and following a vocational pathway equally as well
as the academic one," they said.
They suggested five pathways, each encompassing a chunk of the
workforce (see graphic).
Education Minister Anne Tolley announced in April that the
Government would adopt those five "initial" pathways from next
year.
"We are open to more pathways," she says. "I did have someone
suggest that we didn't have entrepreneurship in there. But that is
the sort of broad range we are looking for."
Williams says the ministry is working with training
organisations to produce "initial definitions" of the pathways for
NCEA levels 1 and 2 this year and for level 3 next year.
All are likely to set an entrance threshold around what is now
regarded as "passing" NCEA level 2 - 60 credits at level 2 plus 20
credits at any level.
"When we have the pathways defined, that will allow us to use
that pathway definition to show a young person a road map."
The pathways will overlap, especially at level 1 of NCEA where
many courses will be common. But even if everyone learns maths,
students in the construction pathway may get examples from building
plans while those in the primary industries pathway may do
calculations around livestock numbers.
Each pathway will be of equal status. A student in the
construction pathway may go on to an apprenticeship in the building
industry or to a degree in architecture or engineering. Many may
start on a building site and end up in management.
Tolley has also started a review of careers advice, which is due
to report back to Cabinet by April.
"Some schools do it superbly. Others do it pretty
ineffectually," she says.
Some schools are already anticipating the new direction.
Mangere's preschool-to-year-13 Southern Cross Campus, which opened
the country's first "trades academy" last year, plans vocational
courses linked to the jobs around Auckland Airport - hospitality,
logistics, engineering, health, and education and social
services.
Its student pathways manager, Lagi Leilua, says career planning
starts with "a dream period" at the intermediate level, years 7 and
8.
Brown Aea, a Year 8 Bader Intermediate student attending a
careers expo on the campus this week, was captivated by museum
archaeologist Ma'ara Maeva's offer to measure his brain size
against the skulls of Neanderthal man and modern humans.
"I might be a brain scientist or a police officer," he says. "A
brain scientist will tell you if your head is working all right.
And a police officer because it's a hero - I'd like to be a hero to
other people."
From Year 9, students at the campus and some other schools in
South Auckland's "Aim Hi" consortium receive customised student
planner books where they write their goals at the start of each
year and record their progress every day. Their books are checked
and signed off each week by their class tutors and their
caregivers.
Year 11 student Duyen-Kim Nguyen has recorded achieving 57 level
1 credits and 25 at level 2 so far and, after attending the careers
expo, filled in her options for next year: English, media and early
childhood education.
Year 13 student Silivia Talosaga's book records her career goals
as tourism, business or early childhood education.
Michael Makiha, a Year 12 student in the campus' hospitality
academy, has had work placements two days a week at the nearby Jet
Park and Holiday Inn hotels and at Rainbow's End and Sky City.
"It's fun," he says. "I've always wanted to do this."
Campus director Robin Staples says showing students the
realities of employment is "highly motivating".
In a former job as head of Otara's Sir Edmund Hillary
Collegiate, he placed all Year 12 students in workplaces every
Thursday.
"I was told that because we were losing a day of teaching time,
NCEA results would go down," he says. "The reverse happened.
Although the students spent one day a week for a term in work
placements, the results went up. It's about their motivation."
Will it work?
Making changes in education is never easy, and the new pathways
raise at least three questions.
First, can university-educated teachers - who have for years
geared their work towards getting their students to follow them
into university - transform their teaching to inspire young people
across the whole range of vocational pathways?
The teachers themselves believe they can. PPTA president Robin
Duff says there is no question that the changes are desirable.
"I have very little doubt that they will be enthusiastically
embraced by schools, but it's about resourcing and training," he
says.
Penney Dunckley, a Southland technology teacher and PPTA's
expert on the issue, says teachers already teach a wide range of
practical subjects and always look for practical examples even in
academic subjects.
Maggie Hames, careers adviser at Auckland Girls' Grammar and
president of the Careers and Transition Education Association, says
she encourages all teachers to be careers advisers.
"There is a willingness, but it takes some time and it will take
some resources," she says.
Secondly, are schools physically equipped with the workshops,
kitchens and farms they need to teach practical vocational
subjects?
Tolley says they don't all need to be, because they can work
collaboratively.
Williams says some schools will specialise in particular
pathways, teaching students from surrounding schools in
collaboration with polytechnics and industry.
"If a school doesn't have the capital required for whatever it
is, having this framework between secondary and tertiary means they
can approach the local polytech or private training provider and
say, 'we are looking for a party alongside us with this pathway, is
there something going on?"'
Thirdly, and most importantly, are students and their parents
willing to be steered into practical vocational pathways?
Michelle Palmer, a Christchurch-based member of the NZ Parent
Teacher Association executive, says anything would be better than
ending up, as she has, with two sons aged 17 and 20 at home, doing
nothing.
"It's absolutely driving me nuts," she says. "The system has
already failed them."
Her dyslexic eldest son left school at 16 and worked at
McDonald's for a year. Later he did an Employment Plus course, but
"by then he was too far gone".
The Palmers took in the 17-year-old Rarotongan as a foster child
when he was in a service academy at Aranui High School.
"It's known as a drop-out option, you only go there if you're a
loser," she says. Work and Income found him a job in a kitchen
factory, but he quit. It was a huge shock being asked to get up at
6am to get on a bus and put in a full eight, nine or 10-hour day,"
says Palmer. "I think if he had gone to work experience once a week
from say Year 11, he would have been more prepared."
The Palmers also have an 18-year-old foster son who is working
as a painter and decorator, and an 11-year-old who is doing well.
But Palmer says: "Like all kids, he doesn't know what he's going to
do. If they had people coming to talk to them, and if they could go
and see how a bakery runs or something right from the word go, they
would be more engaged."
She says her elder sons "didn't understand what NCEA was all
about" but each would have fitted into one of the five vocational
pathways. "That would take away the stigma of what they are asking
these kids to do [in service academies]," she says. "If that was
the way it was, I could see all three of them would have been
employed."
Read more online
More ladders, fewer snakes, the New Zealand Institute - http://www.nzinstitute.org
Vocational pathways, Ministry of Education - http://tiny.cc/0ijvv