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2046 days ago

WANTED OLD FASHIONED WORKING TWIN TUB WASHING MACHINE

Sandi from Hurunui District

Does anyone have an old F & P TWIN tub washing machine ( or similar)that I can buy please? My neighbour takes all the water for irrigation and leaves us without enough to make a cuppa sometimes so I had to sell my brand new state of the art automatic washer as it used too much water that we didnt have. I bought a new ( Chinese) twin tub but its fallen apart not up to the job (but better than a rock in a river I suppose in China) so I am wanting to buy an old NZ made one that actually works rather than this new one that just drains all the water out of the washer part every time you spin anything. Its a fault and Haier want more than I paid to fix it so hence the search for an " oldie but goodie" to save the day where I can do the washing in two bowl fulls rather than hundreds of litres ( and hours) with a smart modern one as they are no good as they detect not enough water comng in and shut down and I would come back an hour later expecting it to be done to find it not even started. This hot dry period means I have to use just the two washing up bowl fulls again and I just lost that as this machine's faulty action spun all the water out of the washer instead of the spinner. I curse my damned neighbour everytime I have to do the washing by hand Grrrr!! Can anyone help please?

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2 days ago

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3 days ago

Education changes: Area schools ‘copping it from all directions’

Nicole Mathewson Reporter from The Press

By David Hill, Local Democracy Reporter

A North Canterbury principal says area schools are ‘‘copping it from all directions’’ with Government changes to education.

Amuri Area School principal Matt Barlow has written to Education Minister Erica Stanford to ask whether the pace of change can be slowed down.

Area schools cover all year levels from new entrants to year 13, tend to be smaller and are based in rural areas, meaning they face pressures to implement curriculum changes across the board.

‘‘Schools like Rangiora High School don’t have to worry about year 1 to 3 literacy and numeracy, and primary schools don’t have to worry about changes to NCEA.

‘‘We are a bit of an afterthought. Area schools are like an airport and principals are like air traffic controllers, with planes coming from all directions.’’

While some rural school rolls are falling, Amuri Area School is managing a growing roll.

The roll has jumped from 335 to 380 students since the start of 2023, which includes its largest roll of year 7s (50) and year 13s (22).

Barlow said the school is working with the Ministry of Education to design a new building for science, technology and arts classes.
No budget or timeframe has been decided.

Amuri Area School is in Culverden, on the way to Hanmer Springs, and the relative isolation adds to the challenges.

The relief teacher pool is limited, meaning Barlow and his two deputy principals have had to step into the classroom several times this year.

Roger Hornblow became principal at Cheviot Area School in term four last year, having been a long serving primary school principal.

‘‘Area schools are very complex and I don’t think it is appreciated by everybody.

‘‘We are dealing with the NCEA changes and the year 0 to 8 changes. It is really complex.

‘‘But that is part and parcel of the beast and we need to make sure we do it in a way which give students the best outcomes.’’

It means professional development is constant, and Hornblow is pleased with how his staff are stepping up.

He would like to see ‘‘a unified education policy’’ which did not change every time there is a change of Government.

The New Zealand Education Institute Te Riu Roa and the New Zealand Principals' Federation also called on the Government last week to slow down the implementation of new structured math and English curriculum.

New NCEA literacy and numeracy online tests have also come under fire from secondary school principals around the country.

Education Minister Erica Stanford said extra support is being provided to area schools in North Canterbury, with curriculum advisors visiting schools, assisting with teacher only days and providing webinars.

The schools also have the support of the ministry's area school leadership advisor Stephen Beck, who is taking a year out from his role as principal at Hurunui College.

"Support will be ongoing as the local team looks to ensure our rural area schools have the assistance they require to implement and embed these changes."

But she said introducing structured literacy and numeracy will take time, especially for schools teaching it for the first time.

"Embedding a curriculum refresh, running professional development and responding to our sector feedback are things we will work on together over the coming years."

■ LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.