logo
School curriculum rewrite had serious problems, managers considered using AI to help

School curriculum rewrite had serious problems, managers considered using AI to help

NZ Herald6 days ago
They said they still had not seen a clear definition of the term 'knowledge-rich' as it applied to the New Zealand curriculum.
The Education Ministry told RNZ content of the English and maths curriculum was 'consistent with knowledge-rich curriculum design principles' but it failed to provide a definition of knowledge-rich despite being asked for one.
The latest leak followed a series of disclosures of internal documents that prompted the ministry to hire a KC to investigate where they were coming from.
A 'programme status report' sighted by RNZ said the introduction of a new process for developing the curriculum posed an 'extreme' issue to the work.
'The new delivery process is adding complexity to both internal and external delivery and review procedures as we do not have a clear definition of a knowledge-rich curriculum and what it looks like in a NZ context,' it said.
'There is no international comparison we can pick up and use.'
Elsewhere, the document said lack of an agreed definition was affecting all learning areas of the New Zealand Curriculum (NZC) and Te Marautanga o Aotearoa (TMoA), the curriculum for Māori-medium schools.
'Both the NZC and TMoA curricula lack a clear design framework for defining a knowledge-rich curriculum. This absence of a design point is impacting the development of all learning areas, as continuous refinement and clarification are required,' it said.
'Options are now being looked at to bring in overseas experts to help us develop templates and frameworks for the curriculum which we can then apply.'
The report said the programme was in red status for the month of February.
It said the key challenge was the lack of a constant template for the work it was producing.
The document said even if the ministry resolved that problem it still faced challenges including having to revise its work due to changing expectations, lack of a clear and consistent understanding of the term 'knowledge rich', and lack of a design framework.
The status report warned that governance groups associated with the rewrite were ineffective because they provided conflicting advice and their feedback was not always followed.
It said stakeholders had different expectations about the use of mātauranga Māori in the curriculum and contributing groups lacked skills and experience.
The ministry told RNZ it was developing the curriculum framework, Te Mātaiaho, to be consistent with a knowledge-rich curriculum.
It said since last year its work on defining a knowledge-rich curriculum was informed by several sources and a literature review had been commissioned.
However, it did not provide any definition, despite being asked for one.
The ministry told RNZ the curriculum rewrite was currently at red status after being in amber status in the previous two months.
'Due to the scale and complexity of this work, shifts between Amber and Red status are expected. The Ministry actively manages programme risks using its risk management framework, with mitigation strategies in place, regularly monitored, and escalated when necessary,' it said.
It said the work had 10 high risks, 25 moderate risks and five low risks.
Curriculum being 'built as the plane was flying'
Post Primary Teachers Association vice-president Kieran Gainsford told RNZ teacher subject association leaders met recently and were worried about a lack of clarity about key terms such as the 'science of learning' and 'knowledge-rich curriculum'.
Gainsford said teachers had been saying for some time it was critical that the curriculum was clear.
'If even officials aren't sure of what they mean by the terms of science of learning and knowledge-rich curriculum, knowledge-rich in particular, then it leads to the question of how on earth are schools and teachers supposed to know what they mean by that,' he said.
He said the ministry was yet to publish a clear definition of the term knowledge-rich and it needed to be crystal-clear.
'At the moment we're trying to respond in many cases to stuff that's poorly defined and that leads to debate or discussion that isn't particularly fruitful,' he said.
Principals Federation president Leanne Otene said it was clear to primary and intermediate principals the curriculum was 'being built as the plane was flying'.
She said a knowledge-rich curriculum would define what needed to be taught at each level of learning, but the ministry had not delivered on that.
Otene said parts of the published curriculums read like they had been cut and pasted from elsewhere.
Association of English Teachers president Pip Tinning said the problems outlined by the ministry documents were not normal for curriculum development.
She said the ministry had not explained knowledge-rich in terms of the English curriculum or its definition of the science of learning.
Meanwhile, a separate Education Ministry document from December last year titled 'Options for change to the curriculum regulatory system' showed plans to allow the Education Minister to set different curriculum expectations for different types of schools.
The document said the power could be useful to help schools better support their students.
'For example, there could be a pedagogy that only schools and kura with technology hubs must use, or a curriculum statement that applies specifically for kura kaupapa Māori,' the document said.
The document said education sector groups were largely supportive of the plans, which would ensure the curriculum was reviewed and updated regularly.
Manager raised possibility of using AI
A document about the Science curriculum outlined shortcomings with the existing curriculum which the ministry said resulted in overcrowded lessons and few children enjoying the subject and continuing it at university.
It said the curriculum needed to be revised to help students understand science in day-to-day life and other countries were changing their science curriculums for similar reasons.
A senior manager's briefing to ministry staff raised the possibility of using AI to write some of the material underpinning the curriculum.
The manager said they could use AI to synthesise the curriculums of countries such as Singapore, NSW, British Columbia, with New Zealand information almost instantly.
They said it could also ensure the use of consistent language between curriculum documents.
Asked about the use of AI, the ministry told RNZ: 'The ministry is exploring how artificial intelligence tools can support curriculum development, particularly by analysing and synthesising information from international curricula and related knowledge frameworks. AI is not being used to directly write curriculum content but may assist with background research and insights.'
-RNZ
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Agrivoltaics: Waiuku farm combines solar panels with grazing livestock
Agrivoltaics: Waiuku farm combines solar panels with grazing livestock

NZ Herald

time3 hours ago

  • NZ Herald

Agrivoltaics: Waiuku farm combines solar panels with grazing livestock

Running the 48ha property has deepened her appreciation for farmers working to improve soil and water quality, while trying to maintain a profitable business. A desire to be outside and working with animals was part of the appeal for the Upchurches coming home as well. 'This farm is where I grew up, so it was a real coming home for me,' Merrin Upchurch said. 'When we were living in Europe in Amsterdam, I really missed the animals and being outside.' The couple started raising pigs, as Merrin Upchurch's mum Judy had planted a lot of fruit and nut trees. The pigs graze below and hoover up the excess windfall produce. They have a handful of breeding sows, a boar and young 'boar-to-be', and when Country Life visited, two litters of six piglets each. 'There was huge demand for the Berkshires because they've got a great rep,' Nigel Upchurch explained. 'They're known as the Wagyu of the pork world, and they are beautiful meat, nicely marbled, delicious, quite frankly.' Merrin Upchurch said the domestic pork industry had taken a hammering because it was cheaper to import from overseas, where many countries had less stringent welfare standards. 'There's nothing better than your own pork,' she said. 'Fattened on chestnuts and free-range like this, it's a completely different type of meat.' Six hungry piglets enjoy their breakfast. Photo / RNZ, Gianina Schwanecke The pigs are also fed food scraps from a thrice-weekly run to the local supermarket, which helps add nutrients back into the soil. Woodchips from fallen and felled trees on the property are added where the pigs roam during the winter months to reduce mud and absorb excess nitrogen. 'With the amount of produce we're bringing into the pig areas, there's actually quite a bit of nutrient coming into the areas,' Merrin Upchurch said. The pigs are also fed food scraps from a thrice weekly run to the local supermarket, which help add nutrients back into the soil. Photo / RNZ, Gianina Schwanecke 'This farm was actually run as an organic property for about 15 years, and so the inputs that have been added to the property in terms of fertiliser have all been natural products.' Rotating stock, including young mobs of heifers up to 200kg, also helps, as the cattle eat down the tougher grass the pigs don't like to eat. The couple aim to run the farm with as few external inputs as possible, with hopes to see it eventually become carbon-neutral, if not a carbon sink. The couple also run pigs. Photo / Gianina Schwanecke, Country Life It's why, over 18 months ago, they added more than 3000 solar panels across 3ha of the farm. It's the first solar farm built and operated by Lightyears Solar. Lightyears Solar owns the panels and leases the land from the Upchurches. It operates the single-access tracking system, which sees the panels follow the sun, Lightyears Solar co-founder and head of development Matt Shanks said. Woofers Tommy Falconer (left) and Tilly Millson (second from left) have been helping the Upchurches with feeding stock and planting native trees. Photo / RNZ, Gianina Schwanecke 'It works better with the livestock.' The farm generates enough energy to power between 600-700 homes near Waiuku, about 2.4 megawatts or 2400 kilowatts. Even on a grey, drizzly winter day, as it was when Country Life paid a visit, the panels still generate about 25% of their usual production. It's an example of agrivoltaics, the practice of simultaneously using land for solar energy production and agriculture, such as growing crops or grazing stock beneath the panels. As one of the first large agrivoltaic set-ups in New Zealand, there was a lot of 'learning along the way', Shanks said. Agrivoltaic operations are still at the experimental stage in New Zealand and typically include smaller grazing animals such as sheep, so running young cattle has added challenges. The couple run mobs of young heifers, up to about 200kg, under the solar panels across 3ha on the farm. Photo / Gianina Schwanecke, RNZ Shanks recalled running experiments with bamboo poles across the paddock to work out the height needed to be able to run cattle below. The answer? About 1.6m off the ground, so the heifers are unable to cause mischief by eating the wires. The dual land use with young cattle grazing beneath has made the farm more profitable. Lightyears Solar co-founder and head of development Matt Shanks (left) and farmer Nigel Upchurch. Photo / Gianina Schwanecke, Country Life 'Per hectare, this is now the most profitable part of the farm,' Nigel Upchurch said. It aligns with the couple's values and has also added environmental benefits. The solar panels provide shelter for the stock on wet, wintry days and during the heat of summer. 'This summer and autumn was really dry, and we actually noticed the grass was greener under the panels, so we're getting less water evaporation,' Merrin Upchurch noted. While power generated from the farm currently goes back into the grid, the couple hope they will soon be able to run the farm and their house from the solar panels. 'Something we're really keen on is reducing the carbon footprint of the property,' Merrin Upchurch said. In the meantime, new farms are going up around the country, maximising the amount of limited land for solar farms. Lightyears Solar has developed new ones in Canterbury and Wairarapa, with hopes to continue. – RNZ

Schools in literacy crisis, advocacy group warns
Schools in literacy crisis, advocacy group warns

Otago Daily Times

time8 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Schools in literacy crisis, advocacy group warns

By John Gerritsen of RNZ Schools have told advocacy group Lifting Literacy Aotearoa they are struggling with record numbers of students with poor literacy. They say teens are wagging classes and schools are blowing their budgets on extra lessons because they are unable to cope with tough new NCEA reading and writing tests. A snapshot of school experiences gathered by Lifting Literacy showed some students were so far behind in their learning their teachers did not know what to do with them. Lifting Literacy said the situation was a crisis and the government needed to develop a five-year plan to help schools help teens learn to read and write. Principals and teachers from 29 secondary schools responded to an informal Lifting Literacy survey. Their comments revealed the introduction of high-stakes NCEA literacy and numeracy tests called "corequisites" had coincided with the worst-prepared cohort of teenagers some schools had ever seen - thanks to Covid. "It's an enormous issue. We have an increasing number of students who are very limited in both reading and writing," wrote one respondent. "Each year students who come to us at Year 9 are showing increasingly low literacy levels and increasingly high learning needs. The impact is huge," said another. The respondents said teachers were struggling to teach classes that ranged from the barely literate to high-achievers and schools were "scrounging" for funding. "Most high school teachers do not have qualifications to address this," said one respondent. "Pressure has fallen on high schools with little or no support," said another. "We are now operating in planned deficit budgets to fund the high level of need and high stakes for students due to NCEA changes," said one principal. Several respondents said their schools bankrolled literacy catch-up classes and training from the Kahui Ako scheme that gave some teachers release time for specialist work with other teachers in their school or across groups of schools. An English teacher from a large, low-decile school who RNZ agreed not to name, said that arrangement allowed her to work with four classes of Year 9 students who could not read. She said the school would have to cover the cost itself next year because the government axed the scheme in its May Budget. Despite the relatively high numbers of struggling Year 9s, the teacher said her school's current Year 11s had entered the school with the lowest level of education of any Year 9 cohort before or since. "They're the ones that are really struggling with the corequisites because they're expected to pass but as they're failing their identity of their ability is dwindling," she said. The teacher said teaching teenagers to read was often "quite a quick fix", with most requiring only three or four "structured literacy" lessons to learn how to decode words by learning which sounds went with each letter. "Teaching kids how to read and read longer words, which seems to be the biggest problem, that's quite a quick fix," she said. "Teaching younger kids takes a longer time, teaching these older kids, even kids who really struggle and some of them who are dyslexic, once they're shown a certain way some of them are off within three or four lessons, they're gone," she said. "Some might take a lot longer, but the majority of them in high school there's nothing wrong with them other than they haven't been taught that A-U is an "or" sound or O-U-G-H can have 6-7 different sounds, or how to split up longer words," she said. She said the government could achieve great results if it funded similar programmes across the country. Another teacher who worked with others across a major city said secondary schools had been left in the lurch. She said teachers were having to figure out themselves how to help their students. "We have a cluster of people who are all working in the literacy space and we're working together and sharing our ideas and sharing with each other because we've got no support from the ministry and no guidance," she said. Janice Langford provided structured literacy training for primary schools, but recently started working with secondary teachers because of the need. She said English teachers were being asked to do the work of specialist literacy teachers and they were not trained for it. Lifting Literacy Aoteroa chair Jennie Watts said in five or 10 years, improvements the government was making in primary schools would flow through to secondary. But in the meantime, students were not getting a fair deal. "There's an urgent gap. We can't let those kids, the kids who are struggling right now and the ones who are about to hit secondary school, we can't just let them fall through the cracks. She said secondary schools needed a five-year strategy including training and funding to improve teens' literacy. It should introduce a new optional literacy subject separate to English, and remove the co-requisite numeracy and literacy requirement for NCEA. Watts said the government should also provide funding for literacy lead teachers, targeted intervention for the students who needed them, and resources aimed at teenagers.

Firefighters extinguish fire at Auckland's Westgate Mitre 10, search for hot spots
Firefighters extinguish fire at Auckland's Westgate Mitre 10, search for hot spots

RNZ News

time2 days ago

  • RNZ News

Firefighters extinguish fire at Auckland's Westgate Mitre 10, search for hot spots

Smoke could be seen from one of the roller doors at Westgate Mitre 10. Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ A fire at a Mitre 10 hardware store in West Auckland is now out. The fire at Mitre 10 Mega Westgate near Whenuapai was reported at 6.40pm on Saturday to Fire and Emergency. A spokesperson said eight fire trucks were still at the scene shortly before 9pm, ventilating the building and monitoring for hot spots. Firefighters outside Mitre 10. Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ In total 17 fire trucks were sent, including three ladder units, a spokesperson said earlier. The building, which was 200 metres long and 80m wide was described as heavily smoke logged. Fire crews were sent from West Harbour, Kumeū, Te Atatū, Auckland City, Henderson, Parnell, Avondale, Greenhithe, Ellerslie. Firefighters inspecting where the smoke came from. Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ An on-duty pharmacist close by said he heard the sirens and fire trucks after 7pm but couldn't see any flames. The pharmacist said he could see an aerial appliance had its ladder in the air but he couldn't see any water going onto the building. An RNZ video journalist at the scene said the fire looked well contained after 8pm with no major visible smoke or flames. It was extinguished before 9pm. Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ They said a lot of trucks and personnel were coming and going out of an entry to the timber yard. "A small amount of smoke is visible coming out of one of the roller doors near a loading dock." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store