School children want good teachers, access to clubs and sports groups and not too much homework.
Some would also like more sleep.
More concerningly, many LGBTQIA students do not trust their schools with data about their identity and some worry they might be "outed" to their family.
The findings have emerged from an Education Ministry study involving nearly 10,000 school students from years 7-13 to inform new measures of student wellbeing.
Participants were asked 10 questions including how they want their school to show it cares for them, what makes a safe school and what is important for students to learn successfully.
Analysis of the results found 20 commonly-cited themes starting with teachers.
"For ākonga, it's important that there are positive relationships between ākonga and a teacher or trusted adult at kura/school," the report titled 'understanding student wellbeing in the educational setting' says.
Time is the second-highest theme with students saying they need a manageable school/life balance and time to complete schoolwork within and outside of school.
Students told researchers they want schools to be "more understanding about stress and not having time to finish things on time" and "longer deadlines so we don't get stressed".
They also say they want more breaks or down-time from learning.
Elsewhere, students say they want more subject options, less work and less homework.
Students also say they want clubs and activities to join in, and some want more fitness or sports.
Friends, the opportunity to focus quietly on their work, and consideration of students' feelings sre the next most commonly-cited themes.
Students also asked for school rules to be rational and meaningful and to have a say in those rules.
"When something happens let students have a say," says one student.
"Being less strict on uniform rules so we can feel like ourselves," says another.
Other factors include kindness, less stress, free and healthy food and feeling included.
Students also cite sleep as a factor that affects their ability to learn.
One student asked for "starting later for more sleep" while another suggests "letting us sleep in class".
The report says Māori students are unique in expressing what the study summarised as Mana Motuhake - a sense of self-belief and perseverance.
"I kind of love the strict rules and how because we have high expectations, we are able to go out and that," says one student.
"I'm proud of the fact I've been almost always reaching the expectations. I am proud of the fact that I went from 13y in spelling age to 15y," says another.
Ākonga Māori also values whānaungatanga and manaakitanga and the use of te reo Māori in class.
Nearly 20 per cent of the respondents say they have a disability and while they express similar concerns to other students, they also cite a desire for independence and routine.
Fourteen per cent of respondents identified as a part of the Rainbow community
"General comments we received from Rainbow-identified ākonga about data sharing reflected an overarching theme of distrust of their kura/school or teachers with their sensitive information," the report says.
"One ākonga wrote that their teachers do not always recognise the Rainbow community at kura/school, and another shared that they did not trust their kura/school not to 'out' them to their family."
One Rainbow student says: "Some schools are great, but our experience is that they aren't supportive." While another said: "students don't always trust their teachers with sensitive information".
Parents worried about student safety
The study also gathered the views of more than 15,000 parents and families.
It says students have a broader view of wellbeing than adults.
"The wellbeing of their rangatahi is clearly a priority for parents. Concern regarding mental health and the easy access to trained counsellors was repeatedly voiced," the study says.
"Mental health is huge; both my daughters suffer from mental health issues and anxiety so access to school counsellors would be amazing," a parent told the study.
"More counsellors (our school only has one counsellor for 900 students!)," says another.
The report says parents are worried about safety, including physical safety, and students being free to speak up and not feel ashamed.
"Schools are not safe for LGBT or disabled students to be themselves, only very rarely are they able to and this affects their learning in more ways than non-LGBT or non-disabled people can understand," a parent told the study.
Māori respondents want teachers to be culturally-responsive, have high expectations, and normalise te ao Māori in the classroom.
They also want more school counsellors and resources to help students deal with anxiety and stress.
Pacific groups want to see more Pacific teachers and celebration of Pacific culture.
The report says the Education Ministry made student wellbeing a priority, because of extensive feedback about the general wellbeing of students and indicators, such as falling student attendance and engagement rates.
3 comments
Omg
Posted on 13-10-2023 06:40 | By Mein Fuhrer
What a big load of fluffy woke nonsense, what a bunch of overly sensitive cry babies today's students have become.
Oh wow.........
Posted on 13-10-2023 22:15 | By groutby
....I believe you are correct Mr Fuhrer, have the Education Ministry gone looking for a problem to solve?...put simply, surely Mummies and Daddies look after the wellbeing of their offspring...schools are there to educate no more and please no less, if you keep asking these types of questions you will get a different reply from everyone, you cannot EVER please everyone and nor should you try.....concentrate of supplying knowledge for keen minds to absorb, we should reduce excuses for parents to absolve themselves from responsibility....this is just nuts!....
I agree...
Posted on 16-10-2023 14:15 | By morepork
... with the role of the school being about stimulating and facilitating the dissemination of knowledge, and NOT being to subsume the role of parents in providing cultural and language assimilation. As for students being afraid they might be "outed" to their parents, don't their parents get to know the situation? Students who truly feel "different", and are not just responding to peer pressure, should be enlisting the help of their parents and working as a family to integrate their "special needs". The marginalized ones have a right to expect support and understanding from their parents. They are not likely to get that if they conspire with the school to deceive them. The sooner the parents know, the sooner they can make their own adjustments accordingly.
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