As published in The New Zealand Herald, Saturday 18th April 2026
School holidays always feel like a good moment to pause. To step out of the routine, spend a bit more time with the kids, and notice things you don’t always see when life is moving quickly.
What they’re reading. What they’re avoiding. What they’re curious about. What they’re confident in and where they’re not.
You start to get a much clearer picture of where they’re really at. And it does make you think.
Because right now, education in New Zealand is going through some pretty significant changes.
We’re replacing NCEA, a system that has been in place for more than two decades. We’re introducing clearer, more accessible reporting on school performance, including better visibility for parents into things like attendance and engagement, which are increasingly recognised as critical to learning outcomes. We’re strengthening the curriculum, with a greater focus on knowledge, literacy, and numeracy.
We’re also moving away from the era of so-called “open classrooms”, large, shared learning environments with multiple classes and teachers operating in a single space, often with less structure and more self-directed learning, back toward more structured, focused teaching environments. And we’re seeing the introduction of practical areas like financial literacy into schools.
All of this is positive.
It reflects a willingness to be honest about where things haven’t been working as well as they should, and to take meaningful steps to improve outcomes for young New Zealanders. That matters. It’s not easy to take on structural reform at this scale, and it deserves support.
Because there are some clear issues we are starting to address.
When a qualification becomes fragmented, difficult to understand, and open to being “gamed”, it loses its credibility. When too many students are not meeting expected levels in reading, writing, and mathematics, it signals that we need to lift both expectations and consistency. And when parents have historically struggled to understand how their child’s school is performing, improving transparency is a critical step forward.
A parent’s perspective
I had one of those moments the other day that brought this sharply into focus. I was looking through my son’s maths exam, he’s in Year 9 but already working into Year 10 and 11 extension, and if I’m honest, I realised I couldn’t help him.
And I suspect I wouldn’t be alone in that.
I think many parents would find themselves in a similar position, looking at work that has evolved significantly from what we were taught, delivered at a pace and level that can be hard to step into from the outside.
That’s not a reflection on his teacher or his school, both of which are doing a great job. But it did make me pause.
Because it made me ask what this is actually preparing him for.
How much of this is building real capability, problem solving, logical thinking, financial literacy, data interpretation, versus learning to navigate a system of assessment? And how do we ensure that, as learning becomes more advanced and specialised, it remains connected to the real world students are stepping into?
Because if many parents can’t easily step in and support at that level, it raises a broader question about how accessible and connected learning feels more generally, not just for students, but for the families around them.
Making learning more relevant
That’s why I think the move to introduce financial literacy into schools is such an important one.
It’s a recognition that alongside strong academic foundations, we also need to equip young people with the practical skills to navigate real life. Managing money. Understanding risk. Making informed decisions.
These are skills that matter to every New Zealander, regardless of the path they take.
More broadly, it highlights something important. The world our children are growing up into is changing quickly. Technology, AI, and access to information are reshaping how we work and live. Education needs to keep pace with that, not just in what is taught, but in how it connects to the real world.
Where the real work happens
At the same time, it raises a deeper question. How do we ensure that these improvements are experienced consistently by every child, in every classroom, across the country?
Because education doesn’t happen in policy documents, qualification frameworks, or reporting dashboards. It happens in classrooms, every single day, between a teacher and a student. That’s where outcomes are created, or not.
And this is where the next phase of the conversation needs to focus.
The structural changes we’re seeing, replacing NCEA, strengthening the curriculum, improving transparency, introducing practical learning — are important foundations. But their success will ultimately depend on execution.
On great teaching. On clear expectations of what “good” looks like. On consistency across classrooms, not just within schools but across the system. On ensuring that content is both rigorous and relevant to the world students are entering. And on identifying students who need support early, and responding quickly and effectively.
And critically, on backing teachers to deliver this well.
Clarity of curriculum, better tools, stronger data, and the time and support to focus on teaching. Because when teachers are set up to succeed, everything else follows.
A moment of real opportunity
What feels encouraging right now is that we are moving in the right direction.
We are raising expectations. We are making the system clearer. We are being more transparent about performance. And we are starting to broaden what we value in learning, including practical life skills.
But this is more than just improvement. It’s a moment where New Zealand has the potential to lead.
We are a small, connected system. We can move faster than most. And we have a track record of being willing to challenge what is not working and try something different. If we get this next phase right, not just in policy, but in execution, we have the opportunity to build one of the most effective and transparent education systems in the world.
Because this is not just an education conversation. It’s an economic one.
The countries that succeed over the next decade will be those that produce young people who can think critically, adapt quickly, and apply knowledge in real-world contexts. Who are not just good at passing assessments, but confident in navigating complexity.
If we can build that consistently across our system, that becomes a genuine competitive advantage for New Zealand.
Looking ahead
School holidays are a good reminder of this.
When you sit with your child and help them with their learning, it becomes very real, very quickly. You can see the gaps, the strengths, where things click and where they don’t. And you’re reminded that this isn’t abstract. This is their future.
Success, to me, looks like a system where a parent can clearly understand how their child is progressing, where a student can see the relevance of what they are learning, and where every classroom delivers a consistent standard of teaching.
Where literacy and numeracy are non-negotiable. But equally, where students leave school confident in managing money, interpreting information, and navigating an increasingly complex world.
If we stay focused on what happens in the classroom, every day, for every child, then this moment of reform won’t just improve the system — it has the potential to redefine it.
And that is something worth getting right.