The
government is imposing community-destroying changes on a population
that has gone through the quakes. They
Parata's
'lie-telling' infuriates principals
City
schools still fighting closure or mergers were dealt a double blow in
Education Minister Hekia Parata's education announcement.
Phillipstown
School principal Tony Simpson
19
Febraury, 2013
Not
only would the original plans proceed for 19 schools, but some now
had less than a year to go ahead with the proposals.
This
was despite Parata previously giving written guarantees that changes
for some schools would not happen for at least three years.
Parata
said the reason for the new deadlines was to provide parents and
children with "certainty".
But
some principals have reacted with anger at being told "lies"
over the deadlines. Many had enrolled new pupils on Parata's earlier
guarantees, only to have to renege on promises to parents.
Some
schools are already planning appeals over the new timelines. Linwood
Intermediate's closure has been brought forward to the end of the
year.
Lyttelton
Main School and Lyttelton West School have been told they will need
to combine by the start of 2014, rather than 2016 as initially
planned.
South
New Brighton and Central New Brighton schools have the same deadline.
Branston
Intermediate will close in January next year - a year earlier than
originally planned.
Kendal
School will now have to close by the end of the year, rather than by
2016.
Manning
Intermediate may close a year earlier and North New Brighton and
Freeville will merge two years earlier than expected.
Principals
spoken to by The Press were concerned children would suffer from the
"ludicrous" new deadlines.
"We
worked to their timeline and said we'd be guaranteed two years to
take new pupils through . . . now we've made promises we can't
deliver," Linwood Intermediate principal Lee Walker said.
Parents,
teachers and children were in tears after hearing that Phillipstown
School is to merge with Woolston School.
Principal
Tony Simpson broke the hard news to the community beneath the school
flagpole at 11am.
"I'm
feeling very, very sad right now," he said.
"If
this decision becomes a final decision in 28 days, then we aren't
going to be coming to this wonderful, wonderful school for much
longer."
Central
New Brighton principal Toni Burnside said she had had teachers and
children in tears at news the schools would merge by the end of the
year.
She
feared the rush to merge would see her staff and pupils become the
"poor relatives" in prefabs at the back of South New
Brighton's field.
South
New Brighton board of trustees chairwoman Sarah Clark said the
schools should have been consulted before the "surprise"
timeline change was made.
Parents,
too, called the consultation a "joke" and the merger
decision "dreadful" .
Andree
Pearson said the ministry should have simply closed Central New
Brighton School rather than cause upheaval at two schools.
"Because
they've merged, they have to make an entirely new school. [Closure]
would have been better on the community," she said.
Branston
Intermediate principal Jennifer O'Leary said the ministry told the
school its pupils would be accommodated in temporary buildings at
Hornby High School from next year, despite receiving assurances any
children enrolling at Branston this year would be able to finish year
8.
The
school planned to appeal its closure.
Manning
Intermediate principal Richard Chambers said Year 7 and 8 pupils
would either be kept at their current primary schools from January
2015, or would be sent to Hillmorton High School from next year.
"That's despite [the ministry] giving categorical assurances
that any children enrolling here now would finish their time with
Manning.
"You
can't change the rules."
Lyttelton
Main principal Sue Walls said the school would be "very strongly
challenging" the new merger date. It meant the combined school
would have to operate across three different sites for the next two
years.
Kendal
School principal Keith Turner was also considering appealing against
the new timeframe.
North
New Brighton principal Brian Walkinshaw said the school had not
wanted the merger to go ahead, but was unlikely to challenge the
decision.
"I
guess we have to recognise the reality on our side of town with the
earthquake damage and the red zone and the roll reduction," he
said.
However,
Discovery 1 board of trustees chairwoman Karen Wylaars said the
merger with Unlimited made sense as the schools were "philosophically
aligned" .
Parata
said the "interim" proposal will only change if new
information comes to light.
A
final decision is expected to be announced by the end of May.
Five
further schools earmarked to close pending a new Year 1-13 cluster
campus - Aranui, Avondale, Wainoni, Chisnallwood Intermediate, Aranui
High School - have been granted a temporary reprieve.
The
consultation period has been extended to March 7.
Radio
New Zealand is a bit more mealy-mouthed, and as ususal manages to
manipulate the story to reflect the government line
Data
used to decide school changes defended
18
February, 2013
The
Government is standing by data it used in deciding which Canterbury
schools should close or merge as a result of population shifts
following recent damaging earthquakes.
An
interim decision has been announced on Monday to close seven primary
or intermediate schools and merge 12. If they proceed, the closures
will affect 670 children and take place from the end of this year.
The
Labour Party on Monday questioned the demographic information used to
make the decisions.
It
said the closing and merging of schools is happening too quickly and
more time should be given for the South Island city's population to
settle following the quakes.
Acting
education spokesperson Chris Hipkins said the information used is not
based on solid data, with some schools slated for closure are
actually reporting increases in their rolls.
"Schools
are still reporting major errors in their data and in some cases the
Ministry of Education are claiming that school rolls have decreased,
where actually the principals are saying, 'No we've got more
enrolments now than we did have last year'.
"So
I think some of these decisions may well be quite premature."
Mr
Hipkins said shortening the timeframe for when schools will close
will cause unnecessary disruption for children and their parents.
But
Earthquake Recovery Minister Gerry Brownlee says the data is sound.
Mr
Brownlee said on Monday it is possible to predict population growth,
based on a number of factors, including applications to build homes
in new subdivisions on the outskirts of the city.
"Certainly,
the population here is going to grow, we know that. We can predict by
way of the movement that we've got to new subdivisions - the urban
development strategy being a significant guide to that - where those
new populations are likely to grow, and that has been factored into
that."
Some
4500 primary school-aged children have left Christchurch since the
quakes, he said.
Christchurch
schools plan appeals over closure timeframe
With
Toni Burnside - The Principal of Central New Brighton school in
Christchurch. Tony Simpson - Principal of Phillipstown school. Alicia
Bunge-Krueger - Parent of 2 students at Phillipstown School which is
to close at the end of this year.
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