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It's Maori Language
Week and the debate about whether to make Te Reo compulsory in
schools up to a certain age, make it totally voluntary, or consign it
to the 'dustbin of history' is with us again.
PN79 |
I'd like to add my
two-bob bit, not on the compulsory-voluntary debate, but on how to
make Te Reo -- and several other worthwhile subjects -- possible with
only minor changes to the present secondary school system. A
similar approach could also be used in primary and intermediate
schools.
Things have
changed since I was in secondary school but working on what was: there were seven 40 minute periods, three in the morning before the
11am break, two afterwards before the lunch break, and two in the
afternoon. More periods were given to English, the branches of Maths, the Sciences and Social
studies/History/Geography, and less to Physical Education and Music, and they varied
between Year 9 and Year 13.
Majors and Minors
What I'm proposing is
the creation of two classes, or strata, of subjects, majors and minors.
Majors such as English would retain 40-minute periods, and minors could be scheduled into afternoon classes from 1:30-3:00pm of 40-35 minutes duration. Offerings could vary between schools, and at different levels of schooling.
Majors such as English would retain 40-minute periods, and minors could be scheduled into afternoon classes from 1:30-3:00pm of 40-35 minutes duration. Offerings could vary between schools, and at different levels of schooling.
Many possible minor subjects come to mind: Physical Education, Music, Choir, basic to advanced Te Reo, Mandarin,
Samoan and other languages, Civics and other citizenship skills, Art, Homecraft, electrical and woodwork skills (for boys and girls), Driving skills and car maintenance, Budgeting, Computer skills, Love and Sex, Oratory/debating, and so on.
Of course, some minors such as Art and Music could be majors, and where students do not proceed to the more advanced maths, sciences and social sciences, the basic knowledge could be taught as minors. And some minors could be make compulsory, depending on a the 'roundedness' of a child's education.
Further, where the teaching
staff lack the knowledge to teach a subject (or some children
wished to study something not offered by the school), a national TV
channel, dedicated to schools staffed with expert teachers, could be
established and beamed into schools during the afternoon.
A spin-off benefit
would be that adults could record the subjects they are interested
in. TV would become a vehicle of Adult Education. Those of you old
enough to remember NZ before TV may recall that many people hoped it
would have educational benefits.
After school activities today are mainly sports. Some of the minor skills would also make ideal after-school activities.
He aha to whakaaro?
What do you think?
--ACW
.
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