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World Cup to dictate school holidays next year

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Thu, 04 Feb 2010 11:06a.m.

The changes have been made in order to ease pressure on traffic flows and public transport, mostly in Auckland (NZPA)

The changes have been made in order to ease pressure on traffic flows and public transport, mostly in Auckland (NZPA)

As the Rugby World Cup beast gathers strength and pace, schools have been told to step out of the way next year.

The Ministry of Education has instructed schools they must adjust their school term dates to allow for a longer than normal holiday in October, when New Zealand hosts the final stages of the international sporting event.

Terms one and two have been extended, forcing the term breaks to fall later than they normally would. The fourth term, when senior students take their external exams, has been cut by two weeks.

Term one will run from January 31 (at the earliest) or February 7 (at the latest) until April 15; term two will be May 2 until July 15; term three, August 1-October 7; and term four October 25-December 13 (secondary) or December 20 (primary).

Easter falls late next year - April 22-25 - and will be incorporated in the first term holidays.

The changes have been made in order to ease pressure on traffic flows and public transport, mostly in Auckland.

But some secondary schools have been quick to criticise the changes, saying that they will disrupt exam preparations in October.

Rob Burrough, principal of Christchurch's Linwood College, said the new school dates would give teachers less time to "fine-tune" pupils, finish courses, and prepare them for exams before study leave started.

Instead of the usual four weeks, they would have just two.

Canterbury-West Coast Secondary Principals' Association chairman Denis Pyatt agreed the term changes would place pressure on schools.

It was crazy that rugby could have such an impact, but maybe it would be better to have the pupils on holiday, he told The Press.

"It will be very embarrassing if we get knocked out in the quarterfinals," he said.

"I hope it's not just a thing about rugby being bigger than everything else, because it's not."

Julie Moor, principal of Christchurch girls' school Rangi Ruru said the decision had been made without consultation.

Private schools set their own term dates, and her school had decided to return a week earlier than state schools next October.

"It's not that I'm not a fan of rugby, but education is more important," she said.

The decision to change the school year was made in 2007 by then-Labour education and Rugby World Cup minister Trevor Mallard.

It applies to all state schools, even those in the many parts of New Zealand which are not hosting World Cup matches.

Education Ministry early-childhood and regional education deputy secretary Rawiri Brell said information was presented to the Government showing that Auckland traffic flows would be improved if the final stages of the tournament were held during a school holiday.

Ms Brell said the education sector was consulted widely and the total length of the school year remained unchanged.

NZPA

 

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Comments

21 May 2010 09:58a.m.

Claudia(: wrote:

Yay(:

13 Mar 2010 09:06a.m.

Maggie wrote:

I do sympathise with teachers and students alike however the views seem to be a little short sighted. Don't forget this decision was made in 2007!! We have had time to think about how to make it work so no-one is disadvataged. This is a world event... do you think that other countries continue to be able to operate as normal when they host these events? While the general public may not have had a say in whether we hosted this or not we have it, we should concentrate on that. Pull your socks up NZ and get behind this event otherwise it will be an embaressment!!!!

08 Feb 2010 10:32a.m.

Justin S wrote:

I've just left school a year ago and I can tell you now if I were still there I would feel ripped off... and I'm a guy that loves sports! The time before exams is the most crucial of the whole year.

It doesn't matter if it has been arranged so that the overall time is the same. We have those four weeks set aside at the end for a reason. They are to revise the materials needed so they are fresh in our mind going into exams.

If the reason for this is really to control the traffic flow then I think it would have been a better course of action to organise an effective public transport plan. People aren't going to want to drive if it's going to get busy like that anyway. Throw in a few extra buses for two weeks and keep hundreds of cars out of the mix.

I think this decision is going to come back and bite us with our kids results this year. The top level students might not be affected as much, but those who just get through most years may not be so lucky this time around.

My comments are written concerning High School Students

04 Feb 2010 06:59p.m.

Sue wrote:

Richard, I've worked at as a teacher for 17 years. The colleagues I work with don't "moan" and most work through their breaks, planning and preparing for the next term. As for the "real world", I'd like to see you manage 30 students and their education for a week, and see how you cope. Hmm, would you be of the opinion that teachers work 9 - 3 as well?
This article does not say that teachers and students will get more holidays. It refers to adjusting the school calendar around.

04 Feb 2010 02:14p.m.

John wrote:

Great! Does that mean that the Goverment is going to cover the cost for all other Nzer's to get an 2-3weeks xtra holidays or does it mean again that public employee's being the Teachers are going to have free time to go to all the Rugby games (suppose the teachers will also get free tickets to any game, seems fair?)

04 Feb 2010 02:14p.m.

John wrote:

Great! Does that mean that the Goverment is going to cover the cost for all other Nzer's to get an 2-3weeks xtra holidays or does it mean again that public employee's being the Teachers are going to have free time to go to all the Rugby games (suppose the teachers will also get free tickets to any game, seems fair?)

04 Feb 2010 12:23p.m.

M wrote:

This means that many senior students sitting Cambridge Exams will be having exams during the holidays... A very well thought out plan...

04 Feb 2010 11:51a.m.

Alien wrote:

Chris this isn't jeopardizing anyone education. The holidays are being moved around, the kids will still get the same school time, and it isn't the first time this has been done.

04 Feb 2010 11:40a.m.

Richard wrote:

Teachers get so may holidays per year and they are still moaning! They should live in the real world where we only get 4 weeks holidays per year and see how they cope!

04 Feb 2010 11:33a.m.

Chris wrote:

They are jeopardizing the education of children which already sucks just for a stupid game of rugby? its not going to be enough to solve Auckland traffic problems either way.