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    1. Actually I’m with Papa on this, this is obviously something that Kelvin feels strongly on. His tenses change throughout the piece and often the emotions that he feeling spill into personalising sentences that should not be. It would have been easier if the narrative was completed before the comment started. There is a number of issues – the Commisioner and the people around her and their relationship with the principal – from the reading they appear to be bullying and stupid. The principal hopefully has been taking advice from The union and a lawyer and she has been correctly documenting for the law suit. Then there is the Minister and no matter what she has removed herself from the process so the buck doesn’t stop at her desk. Sorry but nothing in this article pulls it back to her – wish it did!

    2. I’m with Papa on this – editing is needed. The narrative gets confused as the facts are interspersed with comments and emotional statements. It would have been better if there was a time line then the commentary undertaken. There are a few issues that I can determine an amount of bullying by the Commissioner and associates including someone from the department – hopefully the Principal has full notes of all meetings and is being advised by the union and a good lawyer. The governance of the school under the Comisdioner appears to be poor and staff are given employment information illegally. However none of this ties back to the Minister and nothing from this article brings back the behaviour to the Minister.

  1. Some immature West Indian cricketer shows no class and it’s big news here.

    The corruption in the realm of Hekia Parata continues and no-one wants to know.

  2. +100 Great Post by Kelvin Smythe!

    …and there are no easy ways to say these things …except the description of Kafkaesque*…this is ‘Tomorrows Schools’

    (* Definition of Kafkaesque. : of, relating to, or suggestive of Franz Kafka or his writings; especially : having a nightmarishly complex, bizarre, or illogical quality )

    ‘Tomorrows Schools’ was the reform disaster David Lange and the Roger Douglas Neolib Labour government introduced into New Zealand education to save money

    ( ostensibly it was to put parents and interested community members in charge of schools…the real reason was to economic…sometimes it worked , sometimes it didnt and was a disaster…eg an analogy would be to put untrained parents and members of the local community in charge of law firms or medical centres or engineering firms or airports )

    …and ‘Tomorrows Schools’ has been followed on by jonkey Nactional in an agenda towards privatisation and Charter schools and overseas corporate running of education ….with State education dis-established and asset stripped…their rationale is that State schools are failing..but they are looking for ways to make State schools fail

    To put it another way:…’Tomorrows Schools’ is the situation introduced by Lange whereby amateurs run school boards instead of a School Inspectorate ….where professional educators ( many of them ex Principals and university educated to MA and Doctorate level) provided the experienced mentoring resources to teachers, Heads of Departments and Principals ….and were the ultimate professional arbiters for schools which were 1.)under-achieving, often not due to the school but to the children’s background… but special remedial work was needed, or 2.) schools in conflict… where teachers were in conflict with the Principal or vice versa and with parents

    This Post is important because of the experience of the writer : “Kelvin Smythe is one of New Zealand’s foremost educators. He was a Senior Inspector of Schools, based at the Hamilton Education Board, until the neoliberal reorganisation of schooling in 1990, under the euphemistic label “Tomorrow’s Schools’, brought this to an end.”

    Rangiora H.S. is one of the largest co-ed State Schools in New Zealand with huge resources allocated to it from a grateful Canterbury farming community over generations in order to give students the option of working on a school owned farm….students came from far and wide to attend this school when I was there as a student…and it had a hostel for agricultural students.

    ….The farm was later sold because Rangiora needed the farm land for housing after the Christchurch Earthquake to accommodate refugees from Christchurch. The school was very asset rich. There was conflict as to whether to reinvest the money immediately into another farm somewhere else or put it to other educational uses by the school in the meantime… until another suitable farm was found.

    In addition to all the recent turmoil of the Earthquake and many new traumatised refugee students and their families from impoverished areas of Christchurch….the Principal’s job was already not easy : 1.) she was a high achieving academic woman ….and women in positions of power tend to be given a hard time by the envious …either through non- cooperation or active undermining 2.)the school has a range of students from very poor backgrounds to very wealthy…3.)the school has a wide range of achievement…eg. from those who do very well and head on to winning rare scholarships to medical school ( up against the best and brightest of NZ private schools)…to those who fail at every level and are often disruptive ( because of family trauma, socio-economic status, poverty, handicaps, addictions) 4.)….this State school MUST cater for them all….from the high achievers to the lazy and delinquent . It is not easy to throw disruptive kids out of a State schools or pick and choose the best students ( unlike Charter or Private schools)

    ‘Tomorrows Schools’ has led to many horror stories …of exceptionally y good Principals being dismissed….ganged up on by the envious and the ambitious and those with an axe to grind for their spoilt children…equally it has led to poor performing, lazy, sometimes ‘criminal’ as in abuse, Principals being very difficult to dismiss….these Principals are not only failing their students and education …but are machiavellian …divide School Boards of Trustees , communities and act as if a school is their personal fiefdom.

    In my opinion the Principal of Rangiora HS is a very good Principal…and she does not deserve what is happening to her.

    ( a film documentary needs to be made of this…how New Zealand State Schooling and education was destroyed)

    If you want an idea of what can happen when (corporate)amateurs take over the lives of professionals…then watch the film ‘Foxcatcher’

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foxcatcher

    ( this true based story happened with a wrestling team but it can equally apply to corporate take over of New Zealand education and education professionals…although hopefully less extreme)

    1. I forgot to add that Rangiora H S has a strong tradition of sporting and cultural achievement at both he regional and national level in things like athletics , rowing , netball, swimming. One athlete Angie Smit has competed internationally at the Commonwealth Games and has been mooted for the Olympics

      http://www.athletics.org.nz/Events/glasgow-2014-athlete-blog-angie-smit

      Students from all sorts of backgrounds from Rangiora H.S have done very well at university…often outperforming students from private schools

      It would be a tragedy if this high performing State school and its Principal were trashed by ignorance and incompetence from right wing bureaucrats implementing National and Act Party ideology of corporate privatisation of education

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