Should a school use any of its funds to send teachers on a study trip overseas? That is the question the Auditor-General must answer when he investigates Blockhouse Bay Intermediate's spending of $20,000 in air fares for 12 of its staff to spend two weeks in the Cook Islands during
Herald on Sunday editorial: Cook Is trip for teachers looks excessive
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Blockhouse Bay Intermediate School, Auckland. Photo / Supplied
It seems unlikely the fee-paying students included those in the school with Cook Islands heritage, or those from all Pacific Islands, just 6 per cent according to its latest Education review Office report.
Ministry of Education guidelines for school boards say overseas travel must be weighed against other spending priorities such as delivering the curriculum.
Spending school funds on overseas travel could sometimes be justified, she said, though "the threshold is high". It seems the ministry knew of Blockhouse Bay Intermediate's planned teachers' jaunt with plenty of time to stop it. It will be for the Auditor-General to make a clear ruling one way or the other.
Even if he finds there was educational value for the school's small Pacific Island component, sending as many as 12 teachers seems excessive. If this was a school answerable to fee-paying parents it might not have dared do this. A state school should be held to the same account.