Education Minister Hekia Parata is eager to promote change in New Zealand schools. She has pushed digital technology into the curriculum, though in a limited way. She wants to reform the way funds get to children with special needs. Her latest initiative is to open up online learning to approved
Editorial: Online school plan invests in the future but needs careful oversight
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Hekia Parata's latest education reform involves online learning. Photo / Bay of Plenty Times
The message here is that change is occurring, and bricks-and-mortar schools are adapting technology for their students. The ministry argues that the proposed reforms will work for pupils too by offering them choice, and with that comes the prospect of students becoming more engaged and therefore more likely to do better.
Parata is committed to a "robust accreditation process" that she says will ensure the virtual schools - community of online learning or 'COOL' - perform. Their students will do the same work as pupils in the school system and be required to enrol at their e-school. These measures reflect the indifferent student results from online schools in the United States, and the fact that correspondence results in New Zealand have fallen short of classroom outcomes.

The New Zealand teacher unions have pointed to evidence of failure in the US system as a reason to oppose e-schools here. The ministry believes COOLs attached to schools might be the way to go, as "blended" learning - a mix of online tuition and classroom study could offer students a mix of social connections and teacher-student relationships.
Under the legislation the minister would have the power to intervene in a cyber school which failed to deliver and lay down demands such as achievement goals or assuring pupil wellbeing. The ministry admits that student welfare is an issue for cyber schools, but maintains that accountability rules will protect pupils. The ultimate sanction would be the minister's ability to revoke accreditation of a COOL which consistently lets its pupils down.
These are sensible protective measures for a new system. It is worth a try but will need careful monitoring as it gets off the ground. The architects of education reforms should never lose sight of the fact that the future of those most affected - in this case, the country's pupils - is the reason for the change in the first place.