
NCEA as we know it should be abolished – Tim O'Connor
The reported strength of NCEA, that is, its flexibility, has found schools 'game' the system, thereby helping students to accumulate credits to earn the qualification.
Depth of learning or the retention of knowledge has too readily become secondary to quality teaching and the learning process.
As NCEA was being introduced in 2002, our school's critique of the new framework said it would:
Undermine the coherence of individual subjects and the importance of integrating understanding
Increase teacher workloads due to the volume of internal assessment.
Remove a consistent national standard and benchmark
Complicate reporting to students and parents
Create uncertainty in university entrance qualifications
Over 20 years later, the Education Review Office (ERO) and the New Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA) have been reporting on the state of NCEA. They highlight major concerns that include 'No core learning is required to achieve subjects within the qualification' and 'The flexibility of the qualification is being used to prioritise credit accumulation over meaningful learning and clear educational or vocational pathways'.
Such concerns need to be listened to.
What we need and need now is the Minister of Education to take the boldest of steps. NCEA, as we know it, should be abolished.
Education Minister Erica Stanford is preparing to make announcements about NCEA. Photo / Alyse Wright
What we need is a simplified, rigorous but fair national qualification. Get the design right and we will have a new system that we can be proud of.
The core foundational knowledge our children need to learn and the science of learning point the direction we need to take quite clearly. Our national curriculum and qualification system need to reflect this.
Introducing a new national qualification will provide every student across the country, no matter where they live, with an equal opportunity to learn content-rich subjects that will provide them with equal opportunities to realise their potential in the world.
What's the fix?
The first step is the introduction of an internationally benchmarked curriculum. This step is under way with the draft English and mathematics curricula in place for consultation.
Our national qualification should then assess our national curriculum in each approved subject area. This will make good sense to parents; however, since the introduction of NCEA, it has not been common sense, as the content has been driven by assessment criteria. This must change.
Ideally, the assessment system will include a number of critical elements in order for the qualification to gain credibility and to be respected by professionals nationally and internationally and parents of future generations of students.
The content being assessed must be aligned with the national curriculum. This needs to be provided to schools years in advance, so schools and teachers have time to prepare and so that students are not disadvantaged by the changes.
Auckland Grammar headmaster Tim O'Connor. Photo / Jason Oxenham
The primary mode of assessment should be examinations, as they are an objective and independent form of assessment. Such a system will allow students from across all regions in our country to have faith that they have earned a nationally benchmarked qualification.
These new qualifications should include some internal assessment, because not all types of content are best assessed under exam conditions. But all assessments must be conducted under controlled conditions and they should all be marked by the NZQA. Under this new system, teachers would not mark students' work in their schools.
Internal assessment marks would not be made available to students until they receive their external results, thereby removing the damaging practice of 'credit counting', which has become such a problem in the current system. This will also encourage student attendance and continued learning throughout the entire academic year.
Results should be reported as percentages, which everyone understands, and which enable comparisons, so that anyone can draw meaningful inferences about student performance.
Norm-referencing the assessment system would ensure marks and results across years could be broadly compared, so that results are more meaningful to parents, employers and universities.
Our national qualifications should be restricted to the final two years of students' secondary schooling – Years 12 (the old Form 6) and Year 13 (Form 7).
The qualification, University Entrance, should be in students' final year, and the quality of these assessments should be endorsed by our universities. As a result of NCEA's flexibility, hundreds of students arrive at our universities annually, only to find they have not met entry qualifications and have to complete foundation programmes.
The recently introduced NCEA corequisites are causing more problems than they are solving at present. They will not be required if new mathematics and English assessments are robust: they will show how literate and numerate students are, and students' entire qualifications won't depend on three assessments.
Introducing a rigorous national qualification that parents, students and teachers can understand and be proud of will provide generations of students with equal opportunities to realise their potential in the world.

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NZ Herald
12 hours ago
- NZ Herald
NCEA as we know it should be abolished – Tim O'Connor
What's the problem? The reported strength of NCEA, that is, its flexibility, has found schools 'game' the system, thereby helping students to accumulate credits to earn the qualification. Depth of learning or the retention of knowledge has too readily become secondary to quality teaching and the learning process. As NCEA was being introduced in 2002, our school's critique of the new framework said it would: Undermine the coherence of individual subjects and the importance of integrating understanding Increase teacher workloads due to the volume of internal assessment. Remove a consistent national standard and benchmark Complicate reporting to students and parents Create uncertainty in university entrance qualifications Over 20 years later, the Education Review Office (ERO) and the New Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA) have been reporting on the state of NCEA. They highlight major concerns that include 'No core learning is required to achieve subjects within the qualification' and 'The flexibility of the qualification is being used to prioritise credit accumulation over meaningful learning and clear educational or vocational pathways'. Such concerns need to be listened to. What we need and need now is the Minister of Education to take the boldest of steps. NCEA, as we know it, should be abolished. Education Minister Erica Stanford is preparing to make announcements about NCEA. Photo / Alyse Wright What we need is a simplified, rigorous but fair national qualification. Get the design right and we will have a new system that we can be proud of. The core foundational knowledge our children need to learn and the science of learning point the direction we need to take quite clearly. Our national curriculum and qualification system need to reflect this. Introducing a new national qualification will provide every student across the country, no matter where they live, with an equal opportunity to learn content-rich subjects that will provide them with equal opportunities to realise their potential in the world. What's the fix? The first step is the introduction of an internationally benchmarked curriculum. This step is under way with the draft English and mathematics curricula in place for consultation. Our national qualification should then assess our national curriculum in each approved subject area. This will make good sense to parents; however, since the introduction of NCEA, it has not been common sense, as the content has been driven by assessment criteria. This must change. Ideally, the assessment system will include a number of critical elements in order for the qualification to gain credibility and to be respected by professionals nationally and internationally and parents of future generations of students. The content being assessed must be aligned with the national curriculum. This needs to be provided to schools years in advance, so schools and teachers have time to prepare and so that students are not disadvantaged by the changes. Auckland Grammar headmaster Tim O'Connor. Photo / Jason Oxenham The primary mode of assessment should be examinations, as they are an objective and independent form of assessment. Such a system will allow students from across all regions in our country to have faith that they have earned a nationally benchmarked qualification. These new qualifications should include some internal assessment, because not all types of content are best assessed under exam conditions. But all assessments must be conducted under controlled conditions and they should all be marked by the NZQA. Under this new system, teachers would not mark students' work in their schools. Internal assessment marks would not be made available to students until they receive their external results, thereby removing the damaging practice of 'credit counting', which has become such a problem in the current system. This will also encourage student attendance and continued learning throughout the entire academic year. Results should be reported as percentages, which everyone understands, and which enable comparisons, so that anyone can draw meaningful inferences about student performance. Norm-referencing the assessment system would ensure marks and results across years could be broadly compared, so that results are more meaningful to parents, employers and universities. Our national qualifications should be restricted to the final two years of students' secondary schooling – Years 12 (the old Form 6) and Year 13 (Form 7). The qualification, University Entrance, should be in students' final year, and the quality of these assessments should be endorsed by our universities. As a result of NCEA's flexibility, hundreds of students arrive at our universities annually, only to find they have not met entry qualifications and have to complete foundation programmes. The recently introduced NCEA corequisites are causing more problems than they are solving at present. They will not be required if new mathematics and English assessments are robust: they will show how literate and numerate students are, and students' entire qualifications won't depend on three assessments. Introducing a rigorous national qualification that parents, students and teachers can understand and be proud of will provide generations of students with equal opportunities to realise their potential in the world.


NZ Herald
16 hours ago
- NZ Herald
Listen live: PM Christopher Luxon speaks after NCEA credibility concerns, new school builds
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon is speaking on Newstalk ZB this morning on the back of announcements on millions of dollars of new classroom construction and revelations of concerns about NCEA. Luxon was yesterday in Drury, Auckland, with Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop and Finance Minister Nicola Willis. They said $6 billion worth of construction projects would begin between now and Christmas. Today, Luxon is due live on air about 7.37am. Listen to the interview via the link below. Education Minister Erica Stanford last Friday announced a $120 million spend on building more classrooms in Auckland, along with the creation of a new school property agency. Two new school sites were also revealed. It had earlier been announced the Government was ditching open-plan classrooms and opting for standard designs. Following the education policy announcements, the Herald then revealed a briefing document to Stanford about NCEA. The damning Government briefing raised significant concerns about the credibility of the country's main secondary school qualification. The document, obtained exclusively by the Herald, was presented by officials to Stanford in June. The minister is expected to announce proposals for the future of NCEA. Among the red-light alerts to the minister is that the flexibility built into NCEA, including regarding what assessments students sit, means courses can be structured around those perceived to be 'easier' to accumulate credits. The Auckland schools getting new classrooms include: Bucklands Beach Intermediate – 2 classrooms Helensville School – 1 classroom Kauri Flats School – 4 classrooms Lincoln Heights School – 6 classrooms Macleans College – 8 classrooms Massey High School – 8 classrooms Mission Heights Primary School – 6 classrooms Mountain View School – 6 classrooms Northcross Intermediate – 8 classrooms One Tree Hill College – 6 classrooms Orewa College – 12 classrooms Panama Road School – 4 classrooms Papakura Normal School – 10 classrooms (in addition to the two learning support classrooms already announced) Papatoetoe Central School – 4 classrooms Papatoetoe East School – 4 classrooms Papatoetoe Intermediate – 6 classrooms Papatoetoe South School – 6 classrooms Puhinui School – 2 classrooms Pukekohe North School – 4 classrooms Rangitoto College – 10 classrooms Te Kura o Pātiki Rosebank School – 4 classrooms Takanini School – 4 classrooms Tuakau College – 6 classrooms Whenuapai School – 6 classrooms Projects announced yesterday included:


NZ Herald
2 days ago
- NZ Herald
Editorial: It may be too late to save NCEA
It is now expected Education Minister Erica Stanford will announce substantial proposals for the future of NCEA. 'There really isn't an option to do nothing,' she said. 'I don't think that tinkering around the edges is going to be something that's going to get us where we need to be.' Part of the problem appears to be the flexibility we deliberately built into the system is now what is causing so much harm and inconsistency. Students quickly also found ways to game the system and avoid external examinations by collecting the required credits to achieve each level throughout the school year. Highlighting the widespread nature of this habit, last year there were more than 250,000 instances of students skipping exams because they felt they weren't necessary. Officials warned students being able to avoid exams 'can mean that critical learning in a subject may not occur'. When students can simply choose not to show up, the credibility of the qualification plummets. The Government also recently introduced some reforms. It had been, in part, triggered by employers complaining about the standard of students graduating with Level 1. Too often these kids couldn't read, write or do simple maths. Now students are required to pass online literacy and numeracy tests in order to gain their qualification. But it may be too late to save NCEA, which now seems so damaged it may be phased out entirely. A review by the Education Review Office (ERO) found that despite the recent overhaul, Level 1 was still 'difficult to understand' and not preparing students for future achievement. It said one option could be to 'drop it entirely'. Stanford told the Herald that New Zealand wanted to be 'world-leading' with its flexible qualification. But the world took a look and said, no thanks. Epsom Girls Grammar will start its Cambridge International pilot next year. It said it had been flooded with 'overwhelming community demand'. MAGS' principal Patrick Drumm also said his school is facing growing pressure to offer Cambridge exams. Parents, Drumm explained, are concerned NCEA lacked 'rigour'. But thousands of Kiwi kids are still doing NCEA. While the qualification may not look the same in the future, we owe it to those still studying hard every day to set them up for success. Sign up to the Daily H, a free newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.