Rural school principals in New Zealand are facing a dual resourcing crisis when it comes to learning support specialists, says Jane Corcoran, from the NZEI Te Riu Roa principals’ council.
The country’s largest union says that due to their geographical location, many rural schools are struggling to access Ministry of Education Learning Support specialists such as speech-language therapists to meet their students’ needs, as well as not getting funding for learning support coordinators based in their schools.
“A national shortage of learning support specialists means rural principals are always on the back foot when it comes to getting learning support for their students because those specialists are hard to come by in isolated areas,” Corcoran, who is principal at Brunswick School in Whanganui, said.
Learning support specialists, such as speech-language therapists and psychologists, travel vast distances visiting multiple schools across rural regions, and shortages in the professions means they can end up overworked. This impacts teachers and principals as well as children.
“It’s a perfect storm of high demand and low supply where principals, teachers, and learning support staff end up overstretched. At best it’s a challenge for specialist staff to make it to the gate of small and isolated schools; at worst, it’s virtually unrealistic.