The game of chicken that Tolley and the unions are playing over National Standards is starting to heat up. What I am interested in finding out is who is going to chicken out first. Or if they are going to crash. A question that I wouldn’t mind an answer to is this: Are National Standards the policy clash between government and teachers like bulk funding was?
A few comments have turned up in this story. First of all there’s the “parents don’t understand this policy”. Of course there are parents who don’t understand this policy, how is this different from any other government policy? For someone to understand this policy (or any other) they have to wade through, in no particular order:
- What the Minister says
- What the Prime Minister says
- What the teachers say
- What the opposition parties say
- What the teacher unions say
- What the media say
- What the legislation allegedly implementing this policy says
- What parents say
- What Boards of Trustees say
That is no means an exhaustive list, but my point is that using the “people don’t understand” in the National Standards debate is useless as it’s just a truism that doesn’t mean anything in itself. Each of these parties have their own agenda, and will spin the thing differently to reflect their own world views et cetera.
And then there’s talk about whether Anne Tolley is listening or not. Well, as Anne Tolley and the unions want mutually exclusive things, the only way that anyone in the unions will be convinced that she’s listened is if she ditches the policy. Tolley can’t win this battle by default. So basically she is trying to be as diplomatic as she can, but really, it’s terribly ineffective as it’s something the teachers clearly don’t want.
I have forgotten a possible scenario. Tolley doesn’t back down, but gets replaced as Education minister because she’s taken too long. The Prime minister would do this because he’s also been quite behind this policy, and of course it is one of the core election planks. So what could happen is that Tolley gets dumped so that another minister with more firepower is charged with getting the policy through. Or alternatively is the one charged with the retreat option if it really has been too long and the government embarrassingly had to give up. And if takes too long, the other main party will get back in again and have a field day with glowing PR about how they’ve repealed some evil policy of a previous government.
So it’s game on. I think the onus is on Tolley to make the next move.
Posted by ivorytowerkiwi