
Educators demand transparency over literacy teacher service axing
Educators are calling for answers from Education Minister Erica Stanford after the decision to disestablish the Resource Teachers of Literacy (RTLit) service despite overwhelming sector opposition.
The specialist support programme was until earlier this year funded by the Ministry of Education and provided expertise in literacy teaching and learning to both students and teachers.
In March, more than 100 of these roles were proposed to have funding halted from next year.
Despite hundreds of feedback submissions hoping to save the service, Stanford has pulled the funding.
New Zealand Principals' Federation vice president Jason Miles said all principals were concerned about the funding cut.
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"Not only will we lose the access to a very skilled literacy specialist for our most vulnerable children, we'll also lose the support that RTLit provides our teachers in professional development."
Literacy Association president Judith Bradley said the group were feeling "really undervalued" and that they could not make sense of the decision.
"There are so many students out there for whom there is not going to be so much support, and if it's not coming from literacy experts then who is going to fill the gap for those students?"
Emails obtained by 1News under the Official Information Act showed multiple requests were sent to both the Minister and the Ministry for more clarity on the changes.
Stanford said the change was not a cut but a shift towards a more equitable model.
Erica Stanford. (Source: 1News)
She pointed to 349 newly-resources structured literacy intervention roles and referenced a 2014 report that labelled the RTLit service as "inequitable" due to its attachment to certain schools.
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"It is not a cut, it is a reinvestment into a better delivery model," Stanford said.

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"It was like $15,000 to $20,000 for full insurance and we just thought it's not doable and it's going to defeat the purpose of the visa. So we didn't go with comprehensive. We went with literally the minimum, which is emergency only. We added cancer [treatment] in there as well because it really made very little difference to the amount." Other financial requirements of the visa were designed to make sure families could support their visiting parents' other health, housing, and living costs, she said. Labour's immigration spokesperson Phil Twyford said it risked being viewed as a visa reserved for families of a wealthy minority. Stanford said other visas were available. "Are you saying it's easy for migrant families to bring their parents in on those other visas?" asked Twyford. "Because that's not at all what people in the community say." Stanford disputed that, and also stressed that the government was being careful to ensure parents were being looked after on a long-term visa. 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"It is important that people stick to the conditions of their visa, because we can't have a situation where if you have a child and wait long enough, then everything will be okay," Stanford replied, first noting it was Helen Clark's government which introduced the law change. "Everyone has to abide by the conditions of their visa. And I'm not sure why in this case we would say 'well, you are okay' because the very next question you are going to ask me after we say yes to the child ... is 'oh, but what about their parents? And that's exactly what's happening." Twyford asked whether she had considered what Australia and the UK do, granting citizenship after the first 10 years of a child's life. "We are not Australia and the UK," she said. "There is already a process for these children, and I understand that they're in a difficult situation but there is a pathway. Apply to the associate minister of immigration." Twyford asked her whether in hindsight, not creating humanitarian visas for relatives of Palestinians living here was the right decision, given the scale of the tragedy unfolding there. A special category visa category had been opened in similar circumstances for families of Ukrainians. Stanford said the difference between Ukraine and Gaza was that Palestinians could not physically escape to get to New Zealand. Cabinet's decision was not being reviewed. "At this point, it's not something that we've considered, it would have to go through Cabinet, and Cabinet have decided at this time that they're satisfied with the settings that are in place." INZ was facilitating people from Gaza who were applying for other visas, she said. Asked about Palestinians already here, INZ head Alison McDonald told the committee that staff would look carefully at those cases. "Not just from Gaza, from Israel, from Iran, from Iraq, people who can't return home... we'll find a way to regularise [their visas] until they can get home." The immigration minister told the committee that changes to skilled migrant visas are coming soon, the numbers of high-rolling investors are increasing and entrepreneur visas will also be given a makeover. The update to the entrepreneur visa would drive productivity, GDP and employment, and help in finding buyers for businesses whose owners needed to sell, said Stanford. AEWV (work visas) were now much quicker for businesses to navigate and more overseas workers were arriving to fill skill shortages. Overseas investor visa application numbers had outstripped expectations, she said, and many of them were also 'huge philanthropists', hinting that some would be well-known names. "I remember we got 200 in the first year, I'd be really happy - we've had 175 since April and almost half of those are out of the States, lots out of Germany, some from China, Hong Kong, Singapore - so a mix, but certainly more than we thought. "There's a billion dollars about to be invested - but it's not the money, it's the people, their skills, their talent. Some of the applicants and where they've come from, you would all know. They're amazing people." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


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