• Lynda Stuart is president of the primary teachers' union, NZEI Te Riu Roa.
Not once, in the seven years we've suffered National Standards, has a parent approached me or my teaching staff and said: "I wish I could track my child's progress in real time on my mobile phone."
Constant measuring of reading, writing and mathematics won't help our students to grow - National Standards data has proven that. Students and their teachers already know what their next learning steps are, and communication with whanau about a student's progress and any social, behavioural or academic concerns should be happening as needed - in context, not through an instant message of a child's latest grades.
That's what made National's education policy so infuriating and upsetting for educators. It's as if the Government has deliberately set out to do the opposite of what the experts on the ground have been calling for.
For years we've been told there's no extra money for early childhood education (sure the money is increasing, but for participation, not on a per-child basis) and schools have been struggling to keep up with increasing running costs because of their near-stagnant operations grants. Meanwhile, students' learning and behavioural needs have been growing faster than the provision of ministry resources. What's needed is more funding for quality early childhood education, teacher aides, one-on-one teaching time and support for children with special learning and behavioural needs, so every child can reach their potential.