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Watch live: Roll-out of new NCEA assessments and refreshed curriculum slowed down

Author
Amy Wiggins,
Publish Date
Wed, 19 Apr 2023, 2:14pm

Watch live: Roll-out of new NCEA assessments and refreshed curriculum slowed down

Author
Amy Wiggins,
Publish Date
Wed, 19 Apr 2023, 2:14pm

The roll-out of major changes to both the curriculum and NCEA assessments is being slowed down in an attempt to lift the country鈥檚 falling standards of achievement in literacy and numeracy, Education Minister Jan Tinetti announced today.

Principals and teachers, who have been calling for a change in the timeline to allow teachers to understand what they mean and better prepare their students, have welcomed today鈥檚 announcement.

Tinetti announced the mandatory introduction of new NCEA assessment standards for Level 2 and 3 would be pushed back a year.

Schools will still be required to implement the new NCEA Level 1 next year but will not have to start using Level 2 until 2026 and Level 3 until 2027.

As Tinetti hinted at in an听with the听Weekend Herald听earlier this month, there would also be a two-year transition period before the new numeracy and literacy requirements would be made mandatory.

The new reading, writing and numeracy tests students will be required to pass before they are awarded any NCEA qualification will still be brought in next year but in 2024 and 2025 students will also be able to sit and pass a specified set of maths and literacy assessment standards as an alternative.

In the听, held in September last year less than half of students passed the writing component - a slight improvement on the previous trial.

When it came to reading, 58 per cent passed while 57 per cent passed the numeracy standard.

Tinetti said the third change would mean schools would still be required to teach the refreshed English, maths, te reo M膩ori and p膩ngarau areas of the curriculum by 2026 but would now not have to teach the rest of the refreshed curriculum until 2027.

Tinetti said the altered timelines followed feedback from teachers and principals who said delaying some of the changes meant they could focus on kids鈥 outcomes.

鈥淭hree years of Covid-19 disruptions have left teachers and students exhausted, so we want to make sure that we are easing that workload a bit and are focusing on what matters to families most,鈥 she said.

鈥淲e share the same goals of wanting kids at school, attending regularly and learning the basics they need to live fulfilling lives. So we鈥檒l keep on with the changes that are needed, but roll it out at a pace that works for teachers and principals 鈥 which is good for the education system in the long term.鈥

Tinetti said her hope was that the slowdown would allow schools to focus on students鈥 literacy and numeracy ability.

鈥淎s Minister of Education, my bottom line is to ensure our young people are getting the education they need and deserve. This includes giving students, along with their parents and employers, confidence that they are leaving school with a strong foundation in maths and literacy,鈥 Jan Tinetti said.

As the听Herald听outlined in its recent听听series, student achievement in core subjects has declined over the past two decades based on both national and international studies.

Secondary Principals Association of NZ president Vaughan Couillault said this change had been requested by many in the secondary sector for some time because of concerns about the capacity of schools and teachers to implement the required changes to NCEA.

鈥淚 think it will certainly take some pressure off the sector - not in terms of content or dumbing down but in the mode of delivery and terms of assessment.

鈥淲ith this adjusted timeline, schools will have more time to build their capacity and adequately prepare for the changes, ensuring that the new standards can be more successfully integrated into teaching practice.鈥

Secondary Principals鈥 Council chair Kate Gainsford and Post Primary Teachers Association acting president Chris Abercrombie said principals were glad the change enabled the refreshed curriculum to drive the changes to NCEA, rather than the other way around.

鈥淲e had serious concerns about the fact that these changes were being done independently of each other and the cart was being put before the horse. It鈥檚 imperative that the curriculum is at the forefront of teaching and learning and the changes being made to it need to feed into the development of the new NCEA achievement standards,鈥 Abercrombie said.

鈥淭he new timeline will enable teachers to be involved in the curriculum refresh in a way that isn鈥檛 happening now. We are pleased that the Minister understands this and she has listened.鈥

He said the new timeline must include professional development for teachers to allow the changes to be implemented as successfully as possible.

As for the new NCEA literacy and numeracy corequisites, Abercrombie said he would have preferred that the tests not be introduced at all for a couple of years rather than having a transition period with an alternative pathway.

鈥淲e welcome the corequisites as a means of strengthening young people鈥檚 literacy and numeracy ability. However, the pilots are showing there is a lot more work needed to ensure that the corequisites are accessible and equitable for all students.

鈥淭hese corequisites are high stakes for rangatahi 鈥 if they can鈥檛 achieve them, they don鈥檛 get NCEA and their life choices are severely diminished.鈥

National鈥檚 Education spokesperson, Erica Stanford, said delaying the assessments was an admission from Labour that their education policies were failing New Zealand鈥檚 kids.

鈥淭his delay is a panicked response from Labour as they finally wake up to how serious New Zealand鈥檚 declining education standards are.

鈥淭he Government鈥檚 pilot of this assessment showed that 90 per cent of students in decile one schools would have failed, and therefore could not obtain any NCEA qualification. Labour has neglected the very students that need a great education to change their lives.

鈥淥verall, more than half of New Zealand students involved in the pilot were unable to pass a foundational writing test the OECD says is necessary to succeed in further learning, life, and work.

鈥淚t is clear the Minister and her predecessor had no clue the pilot results would be this bad.鈥

Stanford said Labour was 鈥渋n the dark鈥 about the progress of New Zealand鈥檚 children because they hadn鈥檛 assessed students鈥 progress since they had been in Government.

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