New Zealand students record worst results in maths and science - how we can turn this around!
New Zealand's year 9 student's scores in the most recent Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) fell by the largest margins since the study began in 1994. Winning the title of our worse-ever results in a major international maths and science test is nothing to be proud of, but it's also something that could have been easily predicted.
Science achievement in New Zealand schools has been declining for a while now, and there is a pattern of disengagement with science that for many students starts in primary school.
So what's going on in our primary schools when it comes to STEM teaching and can we fix it?
As the eternal optomist, I think the answer is YES and as a data driven decision maker I'll tell you why.
At Nanogirl Labs Ltd we have been delivering hands-on STEM teacher training workshops for primary school teachers since 2016. This has given us unique insights into some of the challenges as well as many of the successes when it comes to STEM teaching across the country. Through our research over this time we have collected insightful data into some of the reasons for the lack of science teaching in primary schools across New Zealand. which we released today in our whitepaper.
Our findings include:
- 7% of primary school teachers teachers surveyed reported that they did not teach any science at all in any of their classes.
- 90% of teachers surveyed who reported that they taught little or no science said that they wanted to teach more science.
- Only 22% of primary school teachers surveyed reported teaching science in their classroom regularly.
- Low confidence is a major contributing factor to the high portion of teachers who do not teach science.
Our evidence also shows that even small amounts of training targeted at increasing primary school teachers confidence in STEM fields can make a huge difference:
- After taking a Nanogirl Labs hands-on STEM PLD workshop, 95% of teachers reported that their confidence in science had increased significantly and they had an increased willingness to add science teaching into their classrooms.
While this sounds amazing, we have a waitlist of over 50 schools who sadly don't have the budget for STEM training.
Our mission at Nanogirl Labs is to give everyone, everywhere the chance to enjoy a meaningful relationship with STEM, and to do this we have to support and empower our teachers. Helping them to bring these subjects to life in school, as well as making STEM learning outside of the classroom, relevant and fun will help our students to build strong foundations in subjects crucial to innovation.
So how can you help to bring more STEM learning to primary schools?
- Spread the word! Talk to your children's school and see if they are providing STEM learning training to their teachers.
- If you are interested in supporting our 'science in schools' programme, you or your company might consider making a donation to our charity partner The Bright Future Trust. The trust supports access to STEM learning opportunities, and is helping us bring our programme to low-decile schools around the country.
- If your organisation is interested in partnering with us to make a real impact - in schools, or through our other STEM programmes - please get in touch.
We can't keep underfunding our teachers and our schools - they literally create the future, and with investment we can change the tide and help New Zealand lead the world in science and innovation.
Chemistry/Science Specialist
3 年Putting in place a Holistic Curriculum Content based on a Scientific Systematic Approach, Design Thinking, promoting and encouraging Critical Thinking from Kindergarten (playfully) to the highest institutes of learning (Especially Tech Institutes) will alleviate this problem. Besides there should be full support (MinEd, Private Tech Industries show casing Prospective Tech advancement and importance of STEM subjects in the Tech World), the provision of the necessary resources as well as having mandatory Continuous Teacher Training Workshops in line with the Modern STEM Teaching Methodologies that encourages the uptake and interest in students of STEM subjects as career choice pathway. And not only, there has to be a motivating factor (for them to see the difference between being a YouTuber and studying STEM subjects); And what is it that the students will gain in these STEM pathway careers in life in terms financial rewards, job security, personal satisfaction, and their usefulness to society. In a nutshell it involves all, the great Education Learning Pentagon (Ministry of Education, School, Society, Parents & Students)?
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3 年Hi Michelle, I like your attitude. Just wondering what will change if there is no legislation, or hard-core testing like there is in the best cities and countries like Shanghai, and South Korea? Our whole attitude to education is completely different to our Asian counterparts. I can imagine the primary school teacher workday is already jam-packed and if you dig deep enough the actual structure of education and its delivery inside and outside the classroom is third world at best. We are going to have to face some tough lessons. I personally believe it starts at a much earlier age, around 1-2 years old, where vocabulary can thrive, but when you go into an ECE center its more about play and changing nappies from what I've seen. The biggest takeaway from my Masters Studies of Education is education attitudes as a country, less reliance on testing, detecting learning issues at a young age, not placing education as a priority, and generally lack of education resources at home. We really need to upskill parents and have more world class resources available for free at home with rigorous self and peer and family testing if we are going to see change. The school itself is an impossible place to achieve education excellence for the masses.
Learning Designer and Agritech Innovator
3 年I am currently designing an agritech STEM kit for schools. Well, I am completing the proposal for funding to finish designing it, to be more accurate!
Bringing nature and people back together, one organisation at a time. Born at 331.36 ppm and working so my descendants can be too.
3 年Agreed!! I'm in the process of creating a charity called STEM Curiosity. Let's chat once our pilots are done and we've ironed out any cracks.