Education Minister Erica Stanford has announced an additional $58 million for school infrastructure projects, saying the new money will enable projects to get under way sooner.
The $58m of new funding is part of a $413 million investment package.
This package includes:
- $58 million for operating maintenance work for all schools.
- $255 million for internal and external improvements on all isolated, small and rural schools, representing half of all state schools.
- $100 million over five years for urgent and essential infrastructure work.
While the $58m is new funding, $100m comes from Budget 24, $80m comes from the Ministry of Education Baseline, and $175m is brought-forward funding.
The new $58m would be a one-off top-up to the current property maintenance grant, Stanford said.
This would support schools鈥 operating maintenance works such as painting, exterior washdowns, roof and cladding repairs, she said.
鈥淲e have a significant pipeline of maintenance work to keep our schools in great shape, but we鈥檙e accelerating $413 million of projects so they can get under way sooner,鈥 Stanford said.
鈥淭his will enable schools to do significant maintenance over the coming summer holidays, and support more rural and isolated schools to upgrade their infrastructure.鈥
It follows a string of school property announcements and the establishment of a new school property agency in July to oversee the planning, building and maintenance of new school buildings.
At the same time, the Government announced more than $120m would be spent building more classrooms across Auckland.
Earlier this month, Stanford announced about $300m would go toward repairing and upgrading 33 schools 鈥渇acing some of the most challenging property conditions in the country鈥.
This included new or refurbished classrooms at Dargaville High School, Auckland鈥檚 Alfriston College and Wellington鈥檚 Onslow College.
And in May, Stanford announced a major $35 million upgrade for a Wellington kura after years of making do with dilapidated and inadequate classrooms.
It also comes amid a major shake-up of the country鈥檚 main secondary school qualification. NCEA issues were laid out in a series of damning reports and in August, Stanford announced the scheme would be replaced with a new, structured approach.
Education Minister Erica Stanford during her visit to Brooklyn School in Wellington in August. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Under the new scheme, Year 11 students will face what is being called a 鈥楩oundational Skills Award鈥 with a focus on literacy and numeracy. English and mathematics will be required subjects for students at this year level.
Year 12 and 13 students will seek to attain the NZ Certificate of Education (NZCE) and the NZ Advanced Certificate of Education (NZACE) respectively.
At the time, the Herald also revealed two ministerial briefings from the NZ Qualifications Authority (NZQA) warned NCEA faced a credibility crisis over its 鈥渙verused鈥 flexibility, a lack of coherent vocational education pathways, students gaming the system to accumulate credits, and an over-reliance on internal assessments.
Stanford鈥檚 proposal represents the most significant update to secondary school assessments since NCEA was introduced more than two decades ago.
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