I struggle to understand the backlash from schools after the announcement that National Standards performance is to be published on the internet next month.
The information, which will include Education Review Office reports, school's annual reports and NCEA data, will provide parents with a snapshot of how their child's school is performing.
The Ministry of Education will add National Standards results to the existing government website Education Counts and the data release will be for literacy and numeracy only.
However, schools fear the information will be used to unfairly compare the performance of different schools and maintain that the information will be misleading and damaging.
In the Western Bay, Greenpark Primary school principal Graeme Lind said there was more to schooling than reading, writing and mathematics. He says national standard results should not be published as schools used their own tools and teacher judgement to determine student ability and the standards will not reflect the fact schooling now encompasses all aspects of the development.