Removal of National Standards The Labour government on 12 December 2017 announced the abolishment of the national standards in reading, writing and maths. Education Minister
Chris Hipkins said parents had lost confidence in the standards and from 2018 schools would no longer be required to report their students' results in the standards to the Ministry of Education. The announcement had been anticipated since the Labour-led government took power as all three parties involved in the government campaigned on promises of getting rid of the benchmarks for primary and intermediate school children. The decision was welcomed and widely supported.
Review of Tomorrow's Schools In 2018 following calls for a
review of the Tomorrow's Schools model the government confirmed it would set up a Taskforce for this purpose. After a period of consultation, the final report of the Taskforce was released in September 2019. The Government responded in November 2019. This document established five objectives to meet the Taskforce's recommendations on the review of Tomorrow's schools: Learners at the Centre; Barrier free access; Quality teaching and leadership; future of learning and work; and World class inclusive public education. NELP and TES retained these objectives with actions relevant to the priorities. The Education and Training Act (2020) was passed on 1 August 2020 implementing many of the Taskforce's recommendations
Curriculum review By 2018, the focus on educational change by the government had moved toward a review of the curriculum with the establishment of the
Curriculum, Progress, and Achievement programme. In 2019 a report from the
Curriculum Progress, and Achievement Ministerial Advisory Group, provided advice on improving the curriculum, focusing on strengthening the design and embedding of a stronger focus of student progress in the document, and meeting information needs across the system for all students in years 1–10 in New Zealand schools. In 2020, the Ministry of Education asked the New Zealand Council of Educational Research (NZCER), along with two universities, to provide supporting research for this project, and a range of reports were completed, including one on the suitability of the curriculum-levelling construct that underpinned the curriculum at the time. A full refresh of the curriculum was confirmed on 11 February 2021. The associate Ministers of Education said the goal was make the curriculum "clearer, more relevant, easier to use, and more explicit about what learners need to understand, know and do...beginning with Aotearoa New Zealand’s histories in the Social Sciences learning area". A former politician
Peter Dunne suggested there should have been a more "immediate and active debate about what the refresh would entail", and questioned whether the refresh would ensure "access to and learning about the latest and best knowledge" on what was being taught internationally and not just on national and local factors. Dunne concluded that the curriculum refresh process: [needed] "to be broadly based and inclusive...[and avoid being]...captured and driven by education sector vested interests".
History curriculum The report from the
Curriculum, Progress, and Achievement Ministerial Advisory Group (2019) had specifically identified "focus areas for Māori medium and English medium settings which shaped the recommendations to Cabinet, including addressing aspects of trust and equity", and in response, in September 2019, Chris Hipkins confirmed that "Aotearoa New Zealand's histories would be taught in all schools and kura from 2022...revised to 2023 to give schools and kura more time to engage with curriculum content". Pressure for this to be compulsory had come from petitions to the New Zealand parliament in 2015 and 2019, and ongoing academic and public debate. An extensive process of consultation began in 2020 when two Curriculum Writing Groups drafted content for ''Aotearoa New Zealand's histories
in The New Zealand Curriculum and Te Takanga o Te Wā'' in Te Marautanga o Aotearoa, with the content being surveyed, trialled and reviewed in 2021. There was mixed reception to the draft documents. Some concerns were expressed about possible gaps in the history to be covered, there were questions raised about the focus on content rather than the process of how students learn, and a point raised by a politician that the emphasis on studying colonisation was likely to cause divisions amongst New Zealanders. Positive responses included comments from the New Zealand Historical Association and a review by the
New Zealand Council for Educational Research that indicated feedback from the public that the content was timely and "overdue". The final versions of the documents were launched on 17 March 2022. ''
Aotearoa New Zealand's histories, while a standalone document, was aligned with the English-medium New Zealand Curriculum''. The structure and content focussed on "big ideas" in New Zealand history was challenged by
Brooke van Velden who suggested the curriculum was over-focused on colonisation and promoted a narrative ignoring the multiethnic nature of New Zealand society by just focussing on "two sets of people, Māori and Pākehā".
James Shaw, however, said it was important to deal honestly with the past; an academic noted the new approach as reflecting New Zealand had matured as a society; and the president of the Maori Principals' Association saw the curriculum as potentially transformational.
Te Takanga o Te Wā is a new strand in the Māori-medium curriculum,
Te Matauranga o Aotearoa, which recognised that students explore history by learning about themselves and connections to the world, "to understand their own identity as Māori in Aotearoa".
First draft of Te Mātaiaho In March 2022, progress on the full refresh of the New Zealand curriculum was confirmed with a detailed timeline, and in March 2023, the draft document
Te Mātaiaho, with reviewed purpose statements and overviews for the teaching of Social Sciences, English and mathematics, was released. The elements in these three curriculum areas retained the Understand, Know and Do approach of the reviewed History curriculum. A process for feedback on the English and Mathematics & Statistics learning areas was confirmed on 28 September 2023 and schools were provided with a
Curriculum and Assessment Forward Planner.
Literacy & Communication and Maths Strategy, published by the government in March 2022, noted that key to the refresh was ensuring literacy and communication and numeracy demands were more explicit within the New Zealand curriculum, but two academics claimed this strategy document did not identify the strategies necessary to meet the requirements of the English curriculum, relying on them being explicit within indicators said to show progress, but likely to "[reinforce] a wait-to-fail ethos for ākonga [students]". In a letter sent to Chris Hipkins, the then Prime Minister and former Minister of Education, a group of academics called for the education reforms to be repealed. The authors raised concerns around a radicalized curriculum with "identity categorisation" based on the racial classification of children, and the danger of 'culturally responsive pedagogies' leading to stereotypical views about how Māori and Pasifika students learn. Educator Stuart Middleton welcomed the refresh as "a significant and long awaited development in New Zealand Education". ==Political changes, 2023==