That isn't the sun rising bright and free on the horizon. It's charter schools. The fruit of coalition negotiations between the National Party and Act may have surprised many - including, some reckon, Act leader John Banks - but as of term one next year they will be a reality.
This week, Parliament approved legislation to enable privately sponsored, state-funded schools, unshackled by requirements to employ registered teachers, follow the national curriculum, or comply by the Official Information Act. Partnership schools: as innovative and transparent as the new Anchor milk bottle. Already, 35 proposals have been filed, including one from Ayatollah Tamaki's Destiny Church.
Another, previously unreported proposal for a charter school is understood to have been drafted in the hope of receiving the approval of Education Minister Hekia Parata. A copy of the document was found taped to your correspondent's recycling bin yesterday, and describes plans for the creation of a "Finishing School for New Zealand Political Aspirants - the Cabbage Boat Academy".
The coffee-stained dossier is incomplete - missing, for example, is the schedule of concessions SkyCity is seeking in return for its sponsorship - but a good chunk of the proposed curriculum is intact. At first glance it appears commendably up-to-the-minute.
English: At the heart of the curriculum is an embrace of language, and its power to move the human spirit and whatnot. Core texts traverse New Zealand literature from the beloved karakia The Devil-Beast that Terrorised Muldoon to the new Feelers album. Students will study contemporary styles of rhetoric, especially "I know you are but what am I?" Creative writing classes will include "200 ways to call for an inquiry" and the popular exercise "How to pin the blame on some ministry oik in 100 words or fewer".