I don't buy that argument.
According to the Ministry, the website will not rank schools in league table fashion but will show achievement data in regions and how individual schools are performing against the National Standards in each region and nationally and the information will be published in the form the schools submitted it.
This means the information will be variable so comparisons will be difficult.
What it will hopefully provide is an indication on how well a school is delivering the basics.
Sure, schooling has evolved and now focuses on a child's overall development but it's always reassuring to know that a school is getting the basics right.
To me, literacy and numeracy are the foundations of a good education and any information on how a child's school is performing in these areas would be appreciated by parents.
We are given school reports that assess our child's performance in various subjects and this information will hopefully allow parents to get an indication of how effective their child's school is at delivering those skills.
In my view, publishing the information is a step in the right direction and schools need to get over their fear of being compared with each other.
Armed with this information, parents will be able to assess whether their school is reaching the set standards and, if a school is not performing, be able to ask for improvement if it is not.
Surely that's a good thing.