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Northland schools defy Government move to drop Te Tiriti obligations

Author
Brodie Stone,
Publish Date
Mon, 24 Nov 2025, 11:13am

Northland schools defy Government move to drop Te Tiriti obligations

Author
Brodie Stone,
Publish Date
Mon, 24 Nov 2025, 11:13am

Northland schools have publicly committed to upholding Te Tiriti o Waitangi in their classrooms despite a Government directive canning the obligation.

Education Minister Erica Stanford announced this month a requirement for school boards to give effect to Te Tiriti o Waitangi would be removed. Schools would still be obliged to seek equitable outcomes for M膩ori students.

Stanford said the current legislated requirement meant parents in charge of governance of local schools were expected to 鈥渋nterpret and implement a Treaty obligation that rightfully sits with the Crown鈥.

鈥淪chool boards play an important role in raising achievement. But they cannot and should not carry the Crown鈥檚 constitutional obligations under the Treaty.鈥

More than 1000 schools nationwide have vowed to continue to give effect to Te Tiriti o Waitangi, at least 28 of which were in Northland.

Among those were Waipu Primary School, Whang膩rei Intermediate School, Manaia View School, Ruawai College, Ruak膩k膩 Primary, Moerewa School, Whang膩rei Girls鈥 High School, Kerikeri High School and more.

They also included the School Boards Association, Principals鈥 Federation and the Post Primary Teachers鈥 Association.

Doctor of Education and Whang膩rei Girls鈥 High School board presiding member Maia Hetaraka said schools would stand up for what they believed in.

鈥淲e will do what we believe is right for our communities, and I don鈥檛 mean just M膩ori communities.鈥

A letter addressed to Stanford stated the Whang膩rei Girls鈥 High School board would continue to give effect to Te Tiriti.

鈥淲hang膩rei Girls鈥 High School has worked hard for many years to establish relationships with mana i te whenua and t膩ngata whenua, despite this, we know we have improvements to make. We will not sacrifice any of these relationships.鈥

Schools previously had to give effect to Te Tiriti by ensuring local curriculum and policy reflected M膩ori language, history and culture, and take all reasonable steps to make instruction available in tikanga M膩ori.

Hetaraka told the Northern Advocate there was a 鈥渉uge body鈥 of evidence to suggest education outcomes were better for students who saw themselves reflected in their learning.

Stanford argued the requirement around Te Tiriti o Waitangi made no difference to raising achievement for tamariki M膩ori.

Education Minister Erica Stanford announced this month the Government would remove the obligation on school boards to give effect to Te Tiriti. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Education Minister Erica Stanford announced this month the Government would remove the obligation on school boards to give effect to Te Tiriti. Photo / Mark Mitchell

She said school boards could continue to reflect te ao M膩ori values and customs in ways that were meaningful to their communities.

鈥淏oards lost focus on their core responsibilities: achievement, attendance, keeping young people safe at school and ensuring they鈥檙e learning. Results continued to decline,鈥 Stanford said.

鈥淭he Government鈥檚 recent Treaty References Review questions whether it was appropriate for school boards to be held accountable for meeting the Crown鈥檚 obligations under the Treaty.鈥

Hetaraka said it shouldn鈥檛 be up to politicians to decide how much education people were entitled to.

Dr Maia Hetaraka is concerned at the impact removing Te Tiriti obligations from school boards will have on learners. Photo / 九一星空无限

Dr Maia Hetaraka is concerned at the impact removing Te Tiriti obligations from school boards will have on learners. Photo / 九一星空无限

Associate Education Minister David Seymour claimed schools had more freedom than they did before.

He said Whang膩rei Girls鈥 High School could embed as much tikanga, reo and matauranga as it liked.

Seymour believed education should equip children to navigate the world on their own terms, not 鈥渟hoehorn鈥 them into a view of New Zealand by 鈥渓egislating goals that are political, not academic鈥.

Hetaraka argued removing Te Tiriti o Waitangi obligations was doing just that.

鈥淭o be removing any references and obligations to enact Te Tiriti, it鈥檚 shoehorning people,鈥 she said.

She felt the amendment took the country backwards.

鈥淲e still had some ways to go, but we were as a country finally getting to know ourselves and mature as a nation, and it feels like we鈥檝e gone so far back, and I feel sad for my children,鈥 she said.

Hetaraka worried about the impact the change would have on future generations.

Brodie Stone covers crime and emergency for the Northern Advocate. She has spent most of her life in Whang膩rei and is passionate about delving into issues that matter to Northlanders and beyond.

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