1 May 2022

School truancy: 'No magic wand' when tens of thousands miss classes

4:49 pm on 1 May 2022

Almost 60,000 students are missing at least 3 days of school every fortnight and nearly 40 percent of students are not attending regularly, says a teachers union, as the government announces funding to combat the problem.

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The PPTA says the government's budget funding to stop students skipping school acknowledges the issues they are dealing with.

In a pre-budget announcement today, the Education Minister Chris Hipkins says $88 million will be spent on local education needs.

PPTA president Melanie Webber said it was a step in the right direction when tens of thousands of students were missing classes.

"Schools are the people who know their communities and they know their students and allowing there to be the funding at the top of the cliff so working with students throughout, having the pastoral funding in schools, so that we don't get to a situation when kids are out of school for long periods of time.

"As they say, there is no magic wand to these solutions. It's going to be a whole of government response because these are social issues that require social and economic policies to be looked at as well."

Webber said the PPTA was looking forward to hearing how the government planned to work with schools to ensure the funding was well-spent.

In a pre-Budget announcement from Education Minister Chris Hipkins and Associate Education Minister Jan Tinetti today, Hipkins said attendance rates "haven't been good for a long time".

He said it was a complex issue which had to be addressed right across government.

"There are many reasons why students disengage from learning and this has worsened during the Covid-19 pandemic, so we are putting measures in place to help turn that around."

The funding will include a regional response fund of $40 million over four years to meet local education needs.

"Some of what the regional response fund will be used for is ensuring pathways are there for disengaged youth alongside iwi, schools, councils and community groups and providers. It can be used to support whānau-led responses to break the cycle of disengagement, or brokering services with other agencies to ensure students have the level of support they need to stay in school. It's important and complicated work," Hipkins said.

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Photo: 123rf.com

The government will also spend $18.9 million a "refresh and enhancement" of the Positive Behaviour for Learning (PB4L) programme, which has been in place since 2011. It includes $11.2 million to deliver 14 new School-Wide practitioners and $7.7 million to expand Check & Connect: Te Hononga and Te Mana Tikitiki

President of the Post Primary Teachers' Association Melanie Webber said it is a step in the right direction.

"As they say, there is no magic wand to dispense solutions. It's going to be a whole of government response.

"These are social issues that require social and economic policies to be looked at as well."

Webber said the PPTA is looking forward to hearing how the government plans to work with schools to ensure the funding is well spent.

Further funding from this year's budget includes:

* $7.8 million to address cost pressures in the Incredible Years programmes, to support caregivers, whānau, and school and early childhood educators to improve young children's communication skills and emotional regulation

* $6 million to help address current Attendance Service cost pressures and allow providers to increase capacity to support schools

* $15.5 million to scale up Te Aho o Te Kura Pounamu support for at-risk young people to reengage in school

Tinetti said having a curriculum that is relevant and engaging was important, which is why the government was looking to to establish a curriculum centre within Te Mahau, refresh both the New Zealand Curriculum and Te Marautanga o Aotearoa, and launch the new Aotearoa New Zealand Histories curriculum content.

"This is a key area to help us shift student progress and achievement, by making schools and kura places where children can see their own values and identity in what they're learning."

She said there was "no silver bullet to fix school attendance rates", but the governemnt was trying to ensure there is support in place for students and communities where need is greatest.

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