New email support loop – NZ Home Educators using Cambridge

Erena has created a new email loop specifically for those using or planning on teaching through the Cambridge examinations in the near future. It is an active group so see the aims below before deciding whether or not to join.

Please send this link to all your local home education groups or anyone else you think would be interested.
Thanks,
Erena (list owner/moderator)

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NZ Home Ed Cambridge is an email support group for NZ Home Educators currently using or planning to teach through the Cambridge Examinations.

General Aims for the Group include but are not limited to the following:

  • Discussion
  • Sharing of resources and ideas
  • Buy, sell & swap Cambridge resources
  • Mutual Encouragement and support
  • Cambridge friendly tutors
  • Schools that take external students
  • Study Groups
  • Sharing useful websites
  • Cambridge resource suppliers
  • Sharing student successes and achievements


It is expected that as well as asking for help, members contribute what they have learnt in order to benefit the rest of the group. We all recognise there is a lot of research involved in this educational path so please don’t keep what you find out to yourself!

To sign up, send an email to NZHomeEdCambridge@yahoogroups.com and follow the prompts or visit http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NZHomeEdCambridge


CIE Home Educators Survey

CIE Home Educators Survey

Please read and forward to anyone you know currently studying towards Cambridge Exams or planning to do so in the next three years.

This is the first step…

Following up previous information, Cambridge International Examinations Australasia have asked us (Erena Fussell and Judith Tizzard) to assist with this process by designing a survey for Home Educators.

CIE Home Educators survey

Participation in this survey does not constitute a commitment on your part. The information is indicative only and will be used to assist CIE in planning for the future. CIE is committed to ensuring that Private Candidates have the opportunity to sit Cambridge Exams throughout New Zealand both now and in the future.

The survey will be open until midnight Thursday 24th of February after which time it will be removed. If you do not fill in the survey, your information will be not be able to be included in the statistics for your region which means future students in your area may not have the opportunity to take Cambridge Exams.

Please take 5 mins to complete this survery and pass it onto anyone you know so that we may present the fullest picture possible. Rest assured that anonymity is guaranteed.

Many thanks,

Erena & Judith

Cambridge Exams (CIE) in New Zealand for Home Educators

Message from Erena:

Cambridge Exams (CIE)

in New Zealand

for Home Educators

There is a major problem regarding Cambridge Exams (CIE) in New Zealand at present. A number of parents have been directly contacting schools and asking if they will take private candidates (even ones that aren’t listed as doing so.) As a result, a number of schools are no longer taking Private Candidates. Just today we learnt of two schools who regularly offered this option and have now pulled out. If we are not very careful, we may lose the opportunity altogether!

I (Erena) am involved in a working group which is trying to help solve this problem. This group includes homeschoolers as well as reps from CIE and also the Association of Cambridge Schools NZ (ACSNZ.) CIE are very committed to giving us this option and are prepared to work on our behalf they have requested that, in the meantime, all homeschooling parents STOP contacting schools, effective immediately.  While I can understand people’s initial reactions to this, we need to give the working group time to come up with a solution that is acceptable to the schools. We will do this as soon as possible so we should all know where we stand very soon.

***Please assist us with spreading this message far and wide – to anyone currently studying or planning on studying Cambridge up until and including 2013. A single enquiry could be the straw that broke the camel’s back – the situation is very serious. Home Educating is about choice and we need to preserve this choice!***

CIE has also requested we collate some data about HE students and Cambridge. A survey will be released tomorrow to this end so I will send through the link when that is finished. The results will be passed on (without names) to CIE and used as a basis for going back to the schools on behalf of Private Candidates. It is not an absolute commitment; just an indication of numbers.

Will let you know more when more information comes to hand.

Erena

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Home Educators CIE Survey

Please complete by midnight 24 February 2011

https://hef.org.nz/2011/cie-home-educators-survey/

New Zealand Home Educators using Cambridge Exams (CIE) email discussion group

https://hef.org.nz/2011/new-email-support-loop-nz-home-educators-using-cambridge/

Craig’s blog: Early Release Exemption

Early Release Exemption

“Hi Craig and Barbara
We are a homeschooling family, and I’ve enjoyed reading your Keystone Articles over the last few years.  Thank you.  They so often confirm things to me, when I have my doubts.
A query….our eldest turns 16 in May 2011, and we have been looking at doing a Telford Agricultural Polytechnic Correspondence Course.  It will be educating my child in the right track for the ultimate dream of an animal park or vet nursing. Am I doing the right thing by getting an exemption to ‘leave school’ early in order to slot into one of these courses in January, or is there a benefit in waiting till May.  Can we enrol in a course then and can we still get the Homeschool Allowance while my child studies since my child would then be 16.  I’m having problems trying to source this information from the MOE website, and thought you might have some greater insight into this.
Thanks for your time.”

Good questions.

The early release exemption, letting 15-year-olds get out early, is an option designed for drongos and trouble makers. Teachers under Labour last political term made too much use of this option, and so it has been pretty well closed off. You’d need to put a pretty good case to the MoE in order for them to consider it.

It is a real hassle, isn’t it, that the Polytechs generally are not allowed to enrol someone until they turn 16. You may be able to enrol your child by simply doing it and not mentioningthe child’s age…they may or may not check. This obviously is not a very satisfying way to go. However, if you can make a good case, being very insistent, the Polytech may be able to make an exception…the admission officers do have a degree of discretion and can get exemptions, if needed, from the MoE. I don’t have any idea how difficult such a move is.

Here is the deal with the home schooling allowance:

The exemption is automatically cancelled by law as soon as your child turns 16. However, the MoE will keep your child on its database as a home educator, and will continue to pay out the allowance, until the 1st of January after your child’s 19th birthday as long as you can keep signing the statutory declarations. So the question is, can your child enrol at Polytech and still get the allowance?

The MoE decided that one can enrol in the NZ Correspondence School for one or two papers (three is considered by them a full-time student) and still get the allowance. The NZ Correspondence School trades notes with the MoE, looking for home educators, so if you take three papers or more, they’ll find you out. I don’t know if they have a similar deal with any Polytech. I don’t see why not, if your child only takes one or two papers, but sadly, I’m not the one who makes the decisions. You may need to contact the MoE to get a ruling on that.

Is getting the NCEA qualification an issue for you at all? The NZ Correspondence School now gives its lessons free of charge to all 16, 17, 18 and 19 year olds so that they can study at home to get the NCEA Levels 1, 2 or 3. One does not need to get Levels 1 and 2 in order to get Level 3, but can enrol straight into Level 3 as a 16 year old…if you’d want NCEA Level 3. It is a University Entrance qualification.

If you find you’re stuck waiting until your child turns 16 and then having to wait for the Polytech’s starting date to roll around again, your child can make good use of his/her time in self-study and paid or voluntary work with vet clubs around the place…most of them are quite happy to take on genuinely interested volunteers.

Trust that helps! All the best!

In His service,
Craig Smith

UCOL run New Zealand Institute of Management Level 4 papers – online

UCOL run New Zealand Institute of Management

Level 4 papers – online

free to people who qualify for the programme by meeting these criteria:

* Be 16 years of age or older
* Be NZ residents or citizens
* Be studying at a New Zealand Secondary School  (homeschooling qualifies as this so long as you have evidence of  this)

If any of you are interested in this contact Gloria Evans at UCOL,
email- g.evans@ucol.ac.nz.