Pyne has to go
David Edmunds writes: Re. “Rundle: the education puppet show, with Labor scared in the wings” (Friday). Guy Rundle is too kind to Christopher Pyne. He has to go.
He was the shadow education minister from 2008, and as such responsible for the development of Coalition education policy. It is a mess. It is a mixture of banal motherhood statements, internal contradictions and shallow critiques of Labor. For example, it defers to the states as responsible for schools, and then proposes a range of measures whereby the federal government deals directly with schools. There are other policies, for example, on the teaching of foreign languages that show a complete lack of understanding of the education environment.
Since becoming a government minister Mr Pyne has made a series of quite stunning errors. Firstly on Gonski. Not only was there the broken promise, but after all of this time he simply fails to understand what it is about. He talks about accountability, but provided Gonski money to states without any such accountability and boasted about the deal. Now we have the curriculum review committee, to which he appointed people who will guarantee that the review will be dismissed. If he wanted a result, he could at least have appointed people who might have had some credibility.
On the 7.30 he connected student achievement with an ideological correction to the curriculum. Apparently he believes that reverence for Sir Robert Menzies will improve mathematics. The review is prompted by the coalition policy document that laments bias on the grounds that the national curriculum has two references to trade unions and Ben Chifley is the only prime minister referenced directly.
It is rare to see a senior minister so stunningly unprepared and lacking knowledge in the area for which he is responsible. His grating and pompous style combined with his demonstrable incompetence make him a liability to the coalition government and entirely unsuitable for his job.
Pyne treading on schools’ toes
Scilla Rosenberg writes: Re. “It’s a wrap.” (Friday). The picture reminded me of the limerick:
There was a young lass from Pall Mall
Wore a newspaper dress to a ball.
The dress caught on fire
And burnt her entire
Front page, sporting section and all.
Bravo! to the two Davids. Absolutely correct.
Two related issues: The suggestion from Kevin Donnelly, one of the reviewers, that there should be a bible in every student’s desk (or something similar), is a recipe for disaster where most parents are concerned. IMHO, religion of ANY shade should not be taught in the secular state school system, but is better left to out-of-hours activities on a Saturday and/or Sunday. And that decision should be made by individual parents.
Secondly, the total incompetence and dishonesty of Christopher Pyne could well impact on the outcome of the South Australian election to be held on 15 March. Normally one would expect federal policy to have little influence on a state election, but education is one of the key issues which affects the decisions of parents and grandparents.
The fact that Pyne is a prominent member of the Liberal Party in SA, just makes the whole scenario much worse.
Especially for the opposition leader here, Steven Marshall.
The Whine of Pyne
Leaves me with appal
He has no time
If you listen to his whine
For any commonsense at all.