Education for the future - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Thu, 04 Apr 2019 06:49:58 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Education for the future - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Some Catholic schools oppose changes to the education system https://cathnews.co.nz/2019/04/04/the-community-schools-alliance-opposed-the-establishment-of-regional-hubs/ Thu, 04 Apr 2019 07:01:00 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=116407

11 Catholic schools have joined the Community Schools Alliance, a campaign launched to oppose changes to the ways schools in New Zealand are governed, managed and administered. The Community Schools Alliance is made up of 43 of the country's 2431 state and integrated schools. And the former CEO of the New Zealand Catholic Education Office Brother Sir Read more

Some Catholic schools oppose changes to the education system... Read more]]>
11 Catholic schools have joined the Community Schools Alliance, a campaign launched to oppose changes to the ways schools in New Zealand are governed, managed and administered.

The Community Schools Alliance is made up of 43 of the country's 2431 state and integrated schools.

And the former CEO of the New Zealand Catholic Education Office Brother Sir Patrick Lynch has also suggested that "significant changes" need to be made to the proposal.

A report prepared by a task force led by former principal Bali Haque proposes the establishment of about 20 regional "hubs".

All the legal responsibilities and liabilities currently held by school boards of trustees would be transferred to these hubs.

Massey High School principal Glen Denham, a spokesman for the Community Schools Alliance said he worked under such a system in London and it did not work.

"We are a world-class education system. It's not broken," he said.

"What makes us great is that we are a tapestry of different kinds of schools, that you can go 10km down the road and find a completely different kind of school."

Lynch says there has been a need for a review of what is now referred to as the Tomorrow's Schools model.

"However, the recent task force document succeeds in throwing out the baby and the bathwater, given the proposals it has made."

He says not many people would agree that no changes should be made, "yet the task force seems to have forgotten or overlooked some fundamental aspects of today's New Zealand society."

The Catholic schools that have joined The Community Schools Alliance are: Baradene College (Remuera), Chanel College (Masterton), De La Salle College (Mangere), John Paul College (Rotorua), Liston College (Henderson), Marist College (Mt Albert), Sacred Heart College (Glendowie), St Dominic's Primary School (Blockhouse Bay), St John's College (Hastings), St Paul's College (Ponsonby), and St Peter's College (Epsom).

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Palmerston North's St James' School gets a make over https://cathnews.co.nz/2014/10/31/palmerston-norths-st-james-school-gets-make/ Thu, 30 Oct 2014 18:01:53 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=65040

Traditional classrooms at a Palmerston North Catholic primary school have been transformed into a flexible and safe learning space. After almost four years of planning, construction has been completed on a revamped block of buildings at St James' School. Bishop Charles Drennan, of the Palmerston North Diocese, blessed the refurbished rooms on Wednesday at a Read more

Palmerston North's St James' School gets a make over... Read more]]>
Traditional classrooms at a Palmerston North Catholic primary school have been transformed into a flexible and safe learning space.

After almost four years of planning, construction has been completed on a revamped block of buildings at St James' School.

Bishop Charles Drennan, of the Palmerston North Diocese, blessed the refurbished rooms on Wednesday at a ceremony attended by parents, pupils, teachers, church leaders and community members.

The school embarked on a six-figure upgrade earlier this year, approved by the Catholic Schools' Board to coincide with the ministry's seismic strengthening standards.

The school had a new lease of life, changing from its 1950s appearance, principal Teresa Edwards said.

Edwards said the improvements were in a bid to prepare pupils for modern learning and living. "The world has changed," she said.

New Zealanders needed a broader repertoire of competencies and skills and that started at school.

Board of Trustees chairwoman Margaret Leamy said the new learning space would allow pupils to be self-directed learners ready to face the future when they left school and able to compete in an international environment.

 

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