Beyond brief, Expert Panel wants overhaul of Maths curriculum

Massey University Distinguished Professor and Expert Panel Chairman Gaven Martin (from Massey Website)

John Gerritsen 
Auckland, October 3, 2021

An Expert Panel charged with reviewing the Mathematics (Maths) Curriculum has gone beyond its brief, calling for a major overhaul of Maths teaching in schools.

The Panel’s Report published on October 3, 2021, said that the stakes were high for the entire nation and improving New Zealand’s Maths performance would require sweeping changes.

The Panel, convened by the Royal Society of New Zealand to advise the Education Ministry, said that children in Years 0-10 should learn Maths for at least an hour a day.

Systemic Failure

It said that teachers needed to stop grouping children by their perceived ability and introduce more complex Maths concepts earlier in their education.

The Panel’s Chairperson Massey University Distinguished Professor Gaven Martin told RNZ that there was a systemic failure across the country in the teaching of Mathematics.

“It is incredibly urgent. We have seen a decline in mathematical ability over the last two decades. Everybody in the Ministry of Education knows about this and they have been unable to do anything. We suggest some strategies for at least attempting to move in a better direction. Our children are not smarter or dumber than the rest of the world but we have set up a system that slows them down so that most children by the time they get to the end of their schooling are not at the correct curriculum level although that is on which they are being examined, a rather pointless situation,” he said.

Decline in Maths ability during the past 20 years (Unsplash Picture via Stuff)

Professor Martin said that schools needed better leadership from the Ministry or government and that they could improve.

He said that teachers were not to blame for the problem but many needed upskilling in their mathematical abilities.

‘Severe Slippage’

The Report said that the Ministry should clarify what students should learn and when citing ‘severe slippage’ in what students learned compared with what was expected in the curriculum.

It noted that 55% of Year 8 students were working below the level expected of them.

The Report also called for better tests so that teachers and students could understand children’s performance, better classroom resources, and more training for teachers.

It recommended that the government create roles with higher pay for teachers who undertook Maths training.

The Report said that concepts that should be taught to children earlier included understanding the equals sign and percentages, more focus on fractions at Level One of the curriculum and earlier introduction of percentages and decimals from Year 4 onwards.

“Too much being spent on teaching how to count” says the Expert Panel Report (123RF)

The Report said that too much time was spent teaching very young children how to count.

“This drawn-out focus on counting strategies may substantially delay children’s progress and prevent opportunities for richer mathematical learning at a young age,” the Report said.

It was also critical of the decentralised system of providing professional development to teachers because it did not ensure schools were getting the most effective advice on how to teach Maths.

The National Party said that it believed deeper flaws in the education system are to blame for poor results in Maths. Education spokesperson Paul Goldsmith said that the government should listen to the recommendations.

He said that there was an element of complacency in the education system, and the country had fallen off the pace in Maths.

John Gerritsen is a Reporter at Radio New Zealand. The above Report has been published under a special agreement with www.rnz.co.nz

Share this story

Related Stories

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Indian Newslink

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement