logo
Erica Stanford pulls pin on open-plan classrooms

Erica Stanford pulls pin on open-plan classrooms

Otago Daily Times10 hours ago
Education Minister Erica Stanford. Photo: RNZ
The government will end the construction of open-plan classrooms in favour of a new "flexible" design.
Education Minister Erica Stanford said open-plan designs were supposed to foster collaboration but created challenges around noise and managing student behaviour.
"Overwhelming feedback I've received from schools across New Zealand is open-plan classrooms aren't meeting the needs of students," Stanford said.
"This government is focused on raising achievement and closing the equity gap and an important part of our reform package is ensuring learning spaces are designed to improve student outcomes."
New classrooms will be built using standard designs that prioritise flexibility, like the use of glass sliding doors that can open a class when it is time to collaborate and close it for focused learning.
Shirley Boys' High School in Christchurch is spending $800,000 to convert their open plan classrooms, built in 2019, into single-cell rooms because to cut down on distractions.
"In many cases, open-plan classrooms reduce flexibility, rather than enhance it. We have listened to the sector and new classrooms will no longer be open plan," Stanford said.
She said the average cost of a classroom was coming down.
"We've lowered the average cost of a classroom by 28 percent so we could deliver 30 percent more classrooms last year compared to 2023. We're continuing to drive down costs so more Kiwi kids can access them, faster.
"In 2025, new classrooms cost on average $620,000 compared to $1.2 million at the end of 2023," Stanford said.
The Wellington region will get $25 million of targeted investment in areas experiencing population growth.
Newlands Intermediate will get 10 new classrooms, while Aotea College will get 16.
Stanford said Aotea College was a prime example of where open-plan classrooms did not work.
"The lack of functionality of the open design meant spaces could not be shared or multi-purpose due to disruption and noise. This investment will deliver new, standard teaching spaces that better meet the needs of both students and staff."
Planning was already under way for these projects, with construction expected to begin within the next 12 months, Stanford said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ray Chung's Email About Wellington Mayor Tory Whanau ‘Absolutely Disgraceful'
Ray Chung's Email About Wellington Mayor Tory Whanau ‘Absolutely Disgraceful'

Scoop

time4 hours ago

  • Scoop

Ray Chung's Email About Wellington Mayor Tory Whanau ‘Absolutely Disgraceful'

Article – RNZ Wellington-based MPs condemn the councillor's email about the mayor and say they feel 'embarrassed' to be from the Capital. Wellington-based MPs have roundly condemned councillor Ray Chung's email about Mayor Tory Whanau, and felt 'embarrassed' to be from Wellington. Labour leader and member for Remutaka Chris Hipkins said Chung's comments were 'absolutely disgraceful' and it was 'undoubtedly true' that women in politics were subjected to more abuse than men in politics. 'Women of colour are subjected to a degree even more of abuse, denigration and disrespect, and it isn't acceptable,' Hipkins said. 'Regardless of someone's party political affiliation, regardless of whether you agree with them or not, there are ways to have these debates that still actually respect the person, and I hope that we can get back to that.' Hipkins said social media played a role and people felt more emboldened to make comments from the 'protection of their own living room'. 'When you're sitting at home in your living room, commenting on other people's social media posts or engaging in this sort of debate, ask yourself the fundamental question, 'would I say this to the person if they were standing right in front of me?'' 'If the answer to that is no, why are you writing it down?' he said. Hutt South MP Chris Bishop said he felt 'embarrassed as a Wellingtonian' and the whole affair was 'pathetic'. 'It really saddens me that local government in, what is New Zealand's second biggest city and a really important city, and my hometown, has descended into this level of ridiculousness,' Bishop said. 'The city has really big challenges around housing, around transport, around fiscal rectitude, and we spent the last week talking about everything other than those issues.' Bishop said Chung was a 'rogue' councillor acting in the 'most weird way possible'. Asked why Wellington struggled to put up credible right-wing candidate, Bishop said he thought there needed to be some 'soul searching'. Speaking to Labour in the debating chamber, Bishop said he told media six weeks ago mayoral and former Labour MP Andrew Little was a 'solid' candidate and would most likely win the election. Finance Minister Nicola Willis said it was the 'most stupid, silly email'. Labour's Wellington Issues spokesperson Ayesha Verrall said the comments were 'absolutely disgusting' and ultimately, Wellingtonians would make up their own mind's about Chung's mayoral hopes. 'The bigger issue is, who on earth is going to vote for this guy?' Verrall said. 'It's so important that Wellingtonians and other New Zealanders feel that there's good representation on offer to them. For the vast majority of elected people, you see people diligently going about their job. Ray Chung is well way out of line with norms in terms of how other politicians behave.' Labour's Ginny Andersen said the email was 'unprofessional' and 'unneeded'. 'It's good that he has, I understand, apologised to Tory Whanau. That sort of politics is not necessary.' Andersen said she was seeing an increase in personal attacks on female politicians and Chung's behaviour looks like 'gutter politics'.

Government shuts the door on open-plan classrooms
Government shuts the door on open-plan classrooms

RNZ News

time6 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Government shuts the door on open-plan classrooms

Education Minister Erica Stanford announced the move at Wellington's Newlands Intermediate School today. Photo: RNZ / Mark Papalii The government has called a halt to building open-plan classrooms, even though most teachers who actually use the structures believe their students benefit from them. The buildings - known variously as modern, flexible, or innovative learning environments - have attracted consistent criticism, with some schools spending their own funds remodelling the rooms to create separate classrooms. But surveys by the Council for Educational Research showed most teachers who worked in the structures liked them and believed their students benefited from learning in that kind of environment. At Wellington's Newlands Intermediate School today, Education Minister Erica Stanford said she had been thinking about the issue for a long time. "This government is calling time on open-plan classrooms. We will no longer be building those barn-yard-style open classrooms without any doors that separate classrooms," she said. Stanford said successive governments had been flip-flopping between open plan and single-cell classrooms for years. She said the big open spaces were too noisy and distracting for many children, and they would learn better in individual classrooms. "My message to parents is that your children will be learning in single-cell classrooms that are modular so there will be open-and-close sliding doors that will allow for those classrooms to become bigger for when events require," she said. "But when they are learning using explicit teaching, the new curriculum, the new maths books they will be learning in single-cell classrooms." Newlands Intermediate School principal Chris Els said modern learning environments had their place - but they had drawbacks too. "For neuro-diverse kids, kids that are struggling - really hard. Then you have your kids who know how to hide within the nooks and crannies of open learning spaces, so a lot relied on teachers to know their learner but you'd have the same in a single-cell. Personal preference, I like the idea of a flexible, open-up-close-when-you-can. It gives options," he said. Stanford visited the school to announced that it would get 10 new classrooms. Els said he did not know how often his teachers might want to open the glass doors the minister mentioned and turn their single-cell classrooms into a big open room. "You basically are trying to create an environment that best suits both student and teacher. So if it needs to open and they can work together, so be it," he said. "It depends on what the curriculum area is. If it needs quiet, the door gets closed and if that's the case those kids work within the single-cell." While Stanford said the overwhelming feedback from schools was that they did not like open plan rooms, NZ Council for Educational Research (NZCER) surveys showed the opposite. The council's 2019 survey of primary teachers found most of those who worked in modern learning environments enjoyed it and thought their teaching had improved, though most agreed some children find the rooms overwhelming. "Sixty-two percent of those who taught in an innovative learning environment enjoyed teaching in such an environment, and 55 percent thought their teaching had changed for the better," the survey report said. "Just over half thought they could cater for all students, and 45 percent thought that students were more engaged in the flexible learning environment than traditional classrooms, and 30 percent were neutral about this. But 78 percent of the teachers thought that some students find innovative learning environments overwhelming." The council's 2022 survey of secondary teachers found 49 percent enjoyed their innovative learning environment, 27 percent were neutral, and 24 percent did not enjoy it. Similar proportions agreed that their students enjoyed learning in the space and that it allowed them to teach in ways that benefited their students' learning. But they were less likely to agree that their space was well-designed for teaching and learning with 40 percent agreeing, 30 percent neutral and 30 percent disagreeing. Two-thirds percent agreed that some students found learning in an innovative learning environment overwhelming and 27 percent were neutral. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

New Zealand And Malaysia Commit To Boosting Halal Meat Trade
New Zealand And Malaysia Commit To Boosting Halal Meat Trade

Scoop

time7 hours ago

  • Scoop

New Zealand And Malaysia Commit To Boosting Halal Meat Trade

Minister for Food Safety New Zealand and Malaysia have committed to boosting trade in high-quality halal meat products. Minister for Food Safety Andrew Hoggard says, 'Malaysia is a significant market for New Zealand's premium halal meat products, with exports of more than $60 million last year.' 'Malaysia is facilitating the approval of several New Zealand halal meat premises seeking first-time access to this market, which is crucial to growing exports. 'With a population of more than 35 million people, new access will help set the stage for significant growth in the Malaysian market. 'Once approved, this will boost returns for Kiwi farmers, processors and exporters,' Mr Hoggard says. Malaysian authorities will visit the new premises to review their halal production processes as part of the approval process. This progress was announced at a Halal Forum in Wellington today, hosted by Mr Hoggard and Malaysia Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Rural and Regional Development Dato' Seri Dr. Ahmad Zahid bin Haji Hamidi. Dato' Seri Zahid says New Zealand and Malaysia are also working closely together to streamline the export requirements for New Zealand halal meat. 'Malaysia places significant importance on compliance with halal requirements.' 'We are working hard with New Zealand to strengthen halal collaboration, which includes refreshing the requirements for the export of halal meat to Malaysia. This is a testament to the strong relationship between both countries, and the confidence Malaysia has in New Zealand's halal processing and assurance systems,' Dato' Seri Zahid says. Mr Hoggard says the refreshed requirements will help provide certainty for Kiwi producers in areas including registration of new premises, documentation, processing, labelling, packaging, and storage. 'New Zealand remains fully committed to our strong relationship with Malaysia and supplying the best quality halal products to consumers in this important market.'

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