Make no mistake, the New Zealand education system has been in
steep decline for well over 20 years since the introduction of the NCEA schools
qualification system driven by the postmodernists. With its constructivist
approach to knowledge acquisition, it lost rigour in the delivery of core
knowledge and skills, and markedly in mathematics and the sciences [2]. Teachers
used to a more structured and disciplined learning environment were highly
critical at the time of the introduction of the NCEA, but to no avail. Over the
same period there has been a parallel softening of the academic rigour in
primary school education. The latter was
evident in State primary schools even in the early 1990’s based on the experience
of my own family.
Examples are too numerous to list. An often-criticised case in
mathematics was an NCEA Level 1 problem – the “rectangle question”,
which asked students to “draw a rectangle with an area of 12 square
centimetres”. This question, used over multiple years, was absurdly trivial
for Year 11 students and failed to test mathematical reasoning - a student could draw any rectangle and label the
sides with two numbers that multiplied to 12. It also failed to test conceptual
understanding or require students to generalise the problem algebraically. Students
at this level should be doing reasonably testing problems in geometry and
algebra.
More notable, but for a different reason, was the Year 9
student who, about three years ago, reported to their parent that the class had
just had a science lesson where they were taught the cultural belief
that water had a spirit and a memory rather than the fact that it is composed
of countless trillions of molecules
of two atoms of hydrogen and one
of oxygen.
As noted by Schwerdtfeger, Raine and Lillis [2] (after Hartwich
[3]), “In 2000, New Zealand was one of the top performers in the world. Our
results were above the average of the world’s most developed countries, and we
placed third in mathematics and fourth for reading in a group of 41 countries.
When the latest PISA results were published in 2018, the decline had progressed
so much that in science and reading New Zealand was only marginally above the
OECD average. In mathematics we are now below average. Of the larger group of
78 participating countries, New Zealand ranked low, at 27th. Reading
is similarly in trouble. For example, the Progress in International Reading
Literacy Study (PIRLS) shows that the reading skills of New Zealand students
continue to decline. In 2021, New Zealand recorded its lowest score since the
inception of PIRLS in 2001”
Sure, it will be a challenge for many teachers to deal with a
more demanding curriculum that requires students to be competent in arithmetic,
to learn English grammar and read some demanding literature texts. More than a few of these teachers themselves
came through the dumbed-down system that enabled students to leave secondary
school without integrated bodies of knowledge in core subjects. Understandable, therefore, that these changes
might be threatening.
But look at one of the consequences of the NCEA. Those of us in
university education witnessed an erosion in standards and grade inflation as
we dealt with numerous students who were starting degrees with NCEA Level 3
qualifications, but who struggled to write a coherent sentence, let alone a
short essay. At the last university
where I worked, we had to introduce remedial mathematics and physics courses to
bring university-entrance qualified students up to a standard where they could
tackle Stage 1 Engineering entry courses.
There were commonly students who could not perform basic arithmetic
operations let alone basic algebra or calculus.
The PPTA, like the Tertiary Education Union, have been open about
their critical social justice and decolonisation agenda. The Teachers’ Union supports an education
system that is highly Treaty-centric and oriented more strongly towards Māori
culture, with less focus on the hard basic knowledge called for in the new literacy
and numeracy curriculum.
It is right that New Zealand children should be educated in Māori
culture, so long as this involves an accurate portrayal of New Zealand history
and is free of indoctrination. But what must be non-negotiable is the
acquisition of a solid knowledge-based learning in core subjects. This provides
a foundation for ongoing education that enables students to move into post-secondary
school learning in universities, polytechnics or into immediate employment, and
many more to subsequently move into effective professional or trades roles rather
than struggling to find work in the crowded low-skills market.
Only two months ago, the no-NCEA but barista-qualified son of
a family acquaintance was among 1200 unsuccessful applicants for a job
preparing smoothies in a café. Stories
like this are too common as students have exited the present system with little
having been demanded of them.
The negative Stuff [4] report May 16th 2026 on the
NCEA replacement qualification, quoted the PPTA’s reaction that the
qualification changes are a “significant over-correction, which would bring
in a rigid system that would mean more students leave school without
qualifications.” This of course is
speculation, and in any event far too many students have emerged from the NCEA system
with a qualification that was of little value.
The further claim by the PPTA that students in the new system
will be ill-prepared for an AI world requiring high levels of creativity is in
this writer’s view nonsense. A
creativity-focused education on its own will take you somewhere, but a broad
and deep knowledge-based education is essential to open up far wider creative horizons
for those entering employment in the technically complex AI industry sector.
This is not a time for blinking. Erica Stanford must press on
with the reforms. If New Zealand is to make
real headway in becoming a high-productivity, diverse technological economy
with first world infrastructure and affordable high quality health and social
services, we have to reduce the deadweight and ideological overreach of our
public service, we must strive at every turn for greater efficiency, pay down
debt, and direct more discretionary investment from housing into the productive
sector.
But fundamental to our future success is a well-educated population. Without this, we can look forward
to being a poor and decreasingly relevant Pacific Island nation.
********************************************
John Raine is an Emeritus Professor of Engineering and held Deputy and Pro Vice Chancellor roles in three New Zealand Universities. His responsibilities have included research, research commercialisation and internationalisation.
References:
1. Ben Leahy, “New NZCE qualification unveiled for Years 12-13 to include compulsory exams in every subject”. New Zealand Herald, 16th May 2026. https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/auckland/new-nzce-qualification-unveiled-for-years-12-13-to-include-compulsory-exams-in-every-subject/TQSOQI42KRBFLLJ42TACW4VTQQ/
2. Peter Schwerdtfeger, John Raine, and David Lillis, “Post-modernism and the Degrading of Education in New Zealand “Breaking Views NZ, 24th July 2023.
https://breakingviewsnz.blogspot.com/2023/07/peter-schwerdtfeger-john-raine-and.html
3. O. Hartwich (2022), “Rebuilding Better: Once world-class, NZ’s education system is now a disaster. How do we fix it?” https://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/rebuilding-better-once-world-class-nzs-education-system-is-now-a-disaster-how-do-we-fix-it/SFMT6U2WSFGDLABJSL2RHPCR5I/
4. Nicholas Jones, “NCEA replacement ‘not going to suit our young people’ says teachers’ union”, Stuff, 16th May 2026. https://www.stuff.co.nz/nz-news/360979795/ncea-replacement-details-revealed-high-school-education-set-major-overhaul

6 comments:
A long and uphill battle - which must succeed of NZ is to survive as a first world country. The damage done by the woke and indoctrinated teaching " profession" has been massive - all in the name of equity. A national tragedy - imagine these people running the country!
Our children are undoubtedly our future. They deserve the very best education we can give them. While they should have some appreciation of Maori 'culture', spending any time 'decolonising' and/or being indoctrinated in polytheistic and animistic practices is time very poorly spent. The PPTA and its lead, Chris Abercrombie, need to cease with the ideology and wokeism; put 'the Treaty' back on the shelf and revert to ensuring the very proficient teaching of the main (revised) curriculum subjects and, naturally, be quick smart about it. After all, that's what we pay them to do - educate not indoctrinate.
Recent past poor educational performance is manifest. You'd think they'd have the decency to quietly pull their heads in, seek to do better and get on with it?
You know you are one the right track when the far left start squealing.
Im guessing they want more Palestine curriculum, ram raid classes and at least 2 hours set aside for puberty blockers.
I gather that external exams will play a major role in the new upper secondary qualification system.
External exams have an interesting history in NZ. Before the NCEA, the assessment regime revolved around them; then they were biffed out (other than Schols) in favour of internally-assessed Unit Standards; then they came back for some Achievement Standards.
Many teachers don't like external exams because they feel that they are being examined as much as their students are. And they're quite right. External exam results are an indicator of teaching quality - if students come back from the exam room reporting that they couldn't answer some questions because the material had not been taught or had been glossed over, that teacher could be in a spot of bother. And so s/he should be!
External exams enable direct comparisons to be made between students, between teachers, between schools. A disparaging view of this is that external exams highlight the hierarchy on which elite private (and some public, such as AGS) schools are at the top and schools catering for kids from poorer families are at the bottom. But a more enlightened view is that these exams can be used as diagnostic tools pinpoint problem areas that need to be addressed.
Those who can, do; those who can't, teach.
As an RAF (UK) engineering apprentice in 1968 I required competence in maths, physics and english. If I were approaching the same challenge in NZ 2026 all I'd need would be an ability to name the Maori Gods, say a prayer in Te Reo and sing a silly song in a prehistoric language.
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