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Publication year
2003

Educational research should both inform policy and practice and be forward looking, anticipating the future questions of policymakers, teachers and the community. 

This article uses one research organisation, the New Zealand Council for Educational Research (NZCER), as a case study to illustrate possible strategies for promoting research through utilising and building upon research-policymaking and research-practice linkages.  It highlights some of the issues, opportunities, and risks for research resulting from the demand ...

Publication year
2003

Evidence from the longitudinal Competent Children project is provided which shows the continuing contribution of early childhood education to children's competencies at age 10.  Among the New Zealand sample, children had higher average scores if they had 3 or more years of early childhood education in general.  The quality of their final early childhood education centre, particularly related to teacher-child interaction, also continued to show enduring associations with children's performance.  ...

Authors
Publication year
1999

This article analyses school funding trends in New Zealand since the 1989 decentralisation of education administration to school level. It looks at the extent to which school funding became based on formulae linked to student numbers and characteristics. It concludes that by 1998, New Zealand could be seen as having a quasi-voucher system.

The full journal article is published in:
New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 34 (1), 1998. p ...

Authors
Publication year
2001

The Assessment Resource Banks (ARBs) are computerised banks of assessment material that are available on the Internet.  They are linked to the current New Zealand curriculum statements in mathematics, science, and English.  This paper introduces the ARBs.  It is followed by a description of the diagnostic potential of the ARBs.  The final part is an interactive discussion of the diagnostic dimension of a selection of resources from the mathematics ARB ...

Publication year
2008

There is growing recognition of the importance of helping children to develop an ability to think about biological and environmental issues in terms of systems interactions and impacts.

Several progressions have been published that suggest how their conceptual understandings may develop over time. However these are not necessarily as informative for teachers as for researchers or specialist resource developers, nor do they take account of ‘moment in time’ interactions between ...

Authors
Publication year
2008

The challenge of school leadership succession and supply is a pressing reality for many western countries at the present time as a large number of the 'baby boomer' principals retire within the next five years. 

In New Zealand there is a looming crisis over both supply and quality of future leaders. 

This paper explains why quality is such a problem, and looks at how the heritage of New Zealand's particular ...

Authors
Publication year
2005

This article examines the place of environmental education/education for sustainable development (EE/ESD) in the school curriculum. Despite international calls for EE/ESD to form the pillar of a re-oriented approach to school curriculum, teaching, and learning, in most schools the principles of EE/ESD are poorly understood, and it occupies a marginal place in curriculum and teaching practice.

This article considers the “place” of EE/ESD in the New Zealand curriculum, and the ...

How we use contexts and the part we expect them to play in conceptual learning and in engagement with learning may need to be rethought, Rosemary Hipkins explained at the Science Education Research Symposium (SERS) in November 2009.

Is there actually a problem with keeping students engaged? How do we know? (What is our evidence?) What do we do about it? Why should we change? (What could happen if we don’t?) ...

Publication year
2008

Meet the "confident explorers".  They are young people who are engaged in various forms of study, training and employment in their first three years out of school.  Their commitment to their various pathways can only be described as short-term, yet they have a strong sense of purpose.  It's just that it's not a purpose aligned to a particular job or vocation.  Rather, they think in terms of being a particular ...