Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Education Minister Erica Stanford will hold a press conference at an Auckland school this afternoon, days after revealing plans to significantly shake up the country鈥檚 main secondary school assessments.
The stand-up will be around 2.45pm.
On Monday, Stanford announced NCEA would be abolished and replaced with two new qualifications at Years 12 and 13.
The proposal, which is open for consultation until September before final decisions are made, represents the most significant update to secondary school assessments since NCEA was introduced more than two decades ago.
Under the new scheme, Year 11 students will face what is being called a 鈥淔oundational Skills Award鈥 with a focus on literacy and numeracy. English and mathematics will be required subjects for students at this year level.
It comes after a series of damning reports on the state of the qualification, including from the Education Review Office (ERO), which found despite a recent overhaul, NCEA Level 1 remained 鈥渄ifficult to understand鈥 and was not preparing students for future achievement.
The Herald also revealed two ministerial briefings from the New Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA) warning 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.
Universities New Zealand and education union the PPTA broadly supported the direction of the changes signalled but wanted to see more detail.
The Labour Party is taking a wait-and-see approach while the Green Party is opposed to the changes, saying scrapping the decades-long scheme is 鈥渢hrowing the baby out with the bathwater鈥.
Labour鈥檚 education spokesperson Willow-Jean Prime said 鈥渞ushing changes through now for political expediency isn鈥檛 the answer鈥.
She said schools and parents told her they were concerned about 鈥渉ow hasty鈥 the proposed changes were.
鈥淧revious rushed overhauls have led to students being the guinea pigs for failed change 鈥 like national standards 鈥 so we must get this right."
The Green Party鈥檚 education spokesperson Lawrence Xu-Nan said NCEA was not perfect but it recognised learning took place in different ways.
鈥淸The] announcement is another classic case of the Government favouring one-size-fits-all approaches. Our education system is too important to be reduced to a single, rigid framework that will leave many behind.鈥
Julia Gabel is a Wellington-based political reporter. She joined the Herald in 2020 and has most recently focused on data journalism.
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