Stories by John Gerritsen
News
'Undemocratic and authoritarian' - Educators lash out at charter school plans
Charter schools are a recipe for disaster that will loot resources from state schools, MPs have heard.
Stand-alone body for kaupapa Māori education backs long-held dream - campaigners
Kura kaupapa Māori are hailing a Waitangi Tribunal decision as a major breakthrough in their push for self-determination.
'We've gone backwards': Principals fume over backtrack on building work
Principals are frustrated and worried by a decision to halt 100 school building projects.
More earn-while-you-learn degrees on the way
Degrees that can be completed in the workplace as an apprenticeship instead of in a lecture hall are in the pipeline.
Govt's last-minute changes to bill - two days before submissions end
David Seymour says the late changes are necessary to stop teacher unions from hamstringing the schools.
Multi-million-dollar IT project continues for Te Pūkenga despite looming demise
The new finance system will be useful for the institutes that replace it and stopping it would cause significant cost increases, the mega-institute says.
Workplace training shake-up: Employers could go elsewhere to train staff
Some industries could revolt and set up their own training programmes if they don't like the government's plans for apprenticeships and workplace training.
Apprenticeship funds could be used to re-establish polytechs
Most polytechnics will need millions of dollars in extra funding to pay the bills once they are cut free from mega-institute Te Pūkenga.
'Catastrophic': Universities plead for more subsidies
The tertiary education sector is having another hard year - with half of universities expecting to be millions of dollars in the red.
PSA claims win over Ministry of Education job lay-offs
The Employment Relations Authority has found fault with major job cuts at the Ministry of Education.
New tests can help students who are most at risk of failing - ERO
Compulsory tests will ensure fewer children fall through the cracks at school, says the head of the Education Review Office.
NZQA board told to do 'more intensive monitoring and reporting'
A looming deficit and complicated IT problems prompted the government to order the Qualifications Authority's board to step up its oversight of the organisation.
Te Pūkenga told to hire razor gang to cut costs
The national polytech has been ordered to hire consultants to lead major cost cutting. Audio
Kiwi founder of online private school plans to apply for online charter school
Crimson Global Academy chief executive Jamie Beaton says the company wants to extend its online model to a charter school.
Leaked emails on rewriting curriculum: 'Robustness is missing'
The emails have fuelled secondary school English teachers' fears about the likely content of their rewritten curriculum. Audio
Call for government ban on rifles easily cut down into handguns
At least one in five Alfa carbines and Alfa hunters brought into NZ in three years has been passed on to criminals, police say. Audio
New schools and classrooms urgently needed in high-growth areas, ministry warns
A briefing paper from April said 139 schools were over 105 percent of their classroom capacity.
International students paid $885 million in fees in 2023
Foreign student enrolments doubled in 2023 from a historic low the year before, but only universities were close to their pre-pandemic levels.
University international student numbers bounce back
However, schools and polytechnics had about half as many foreign enrolments as before the pandemic.
Te Pūkenga closure raises questions over loans
There are question marks over what the disestablishment of Te Pūkenga will mean for the millions of dollars of loans between different parts of the mega-institute.
Number of children wagging schools drops slightly
But figures show Year 13 students only attend school 50 percent of the time.
NZ teens score highly for creative thinking
New Zealand's 15-year-olds are among the best in the world for creative thinking, according to a rare piece of good news from the OECD's Pisa tests.
Education Ministers past and present clash
It was just one feature of the Education and Workforce Select Committee's review of the government's education budget.
School attendance lifts slightly: 'Small but encouraging improvement'
Provisional data shows 62 percent of children attended school regularly in the first 10 weeks of the school year.
Education Ministry job cuts paused
The Education Ministry has paused major staff cuts, saying a legal challenge could force it to start all over again.