Digital learning? An expanded curriculum? Changes to the student loan scheme? Find out what the parties plan to do about education - from early childhood to adult learning.
National
- Invest $45 million to revamp National Standards so children, parents and teachers can track their progress throughout the year in particular learning areas
- Invest $160 million over four years to allow primary school students to learn a second language from a list of 10 'priority languages'
- Lift achievement in schools though a $359 million initiative to improve teaching quality and school leadership.
- Invest in building new schools and classrooms
- $126 million over four years to improve student achievement in maths at primary school
- Establish digital internships and digital academies for year 12 and 13 students
- Provide more in-class support to special-needs students and more teacher-aide hours
- Including digital learning and computer coding as part of the school curriculum
Labour
- Invest an extra $4bn into the education portfolio over four years
- Reinstate extra funding for early chidlhood centres that employ 100 percent qualified and registered teachers
- Require all early childhood centres to employ at least 80 percent qualified teachers by the end of the first term in government
- Ensure schooling is genuinely free by offering an extra $150 per student to state and state-integrated schools that don't ask parents for donations
- Establish a comprehensive plan to ensure students have access to mobile digital devices
- Abolish National Standards
- Rebuild out-dated and worn-out school buildings by 2030
- Progressively introduce three years of free post-school education, starting with one year from July 2018
- Increase student allowance payments by $50 a week
- Reinstate funding for programmes - like night classes - that support adult learners
- Create a School Leavers' Toolkit to equip school leavers with vital life skills, including driver training
- Restore post-graduate students' eligibility for the student allowance, and restore eligibility for loans and allowances beyond seven years to students enrolled in long courses such as medicine
Green Party
- Hold a commission of inquiry into the New Zealand education system
- Remove National Standards
- Ensure state schools are fully funded so they are not dependent upon fees, private donations or fundraising
- Reduce class sizes and improve teacher-child ratios in early childhood services
- Centrally fund all teacher and key support staff salaries and support pay parity for early childhood, primary and secondary educators
- Support the continued improvement of the NCEA
- Set standards and guidelines for healthy food provided in schools
- Incorporate ecological sustainability into the core curriculum at all levels.
- Introduce universal teaching of Te Reo Māori in all public schools
New Zealand First
- Develop a collaborative 30-year strategic plan for New Zealand education
- End public funding for charter schools
- Abolish National Standards in their current form and work with the sector on new assessment measures
- Re-establish professional learning and development support for the quality delivery of the New Zealand curriculum
- Increase support for programmes in the early years that involve parents directly in the education of their children
- Urgently and immediately review the funding model for kindergartens
- Make sure there is greater flexibility concerning successful pathways and positive outcomes for students after NCEA Level 1
ACT
- Open more partnership schools and allow state and integrated schools to voluntarily apply for partnership school status
- Increase the funding of independent schools by removing the funding cap and lifting the the per-student funding they receive to 50 percent of state school student funding
Māori Party
- Make te reo Māori, Māori history and culture core curriculum subjects in all schools up to year 10
- Provide all children with free early childhood, primary and secondary education
- Increase the accommodation supplement by half for all tertiary students
- Introduce a universal student allowance with cost of living adjustment to guarantee a livable income during study, for all tertiary students, including post-graduate students
- Write off the living cost component of all student loans
- Increase the numbers of tamariki attending kōhanga reo
- Reduce class sizes in primary schools
- Provide all children with free after-school care and holiday programmes
- Introduce mental health counsellors in all high schools
- Provide free public transport to primary, secondary and tertiary students
- Increase overall funding for Māori medium education
- Repeal the Education (Freedom of Association) Amendment Act 2011
- Remove the cap on the number of allowable wānanga
- Develop a four-year zero-fee ‘First in Whānau’ scholarship for bachelor-level study
- Double the existing Māori and Pacific trade training and cadetships placements per annum for the next five years
- Partner with iwi and employers to provide more scholarship and internship opportunities for whānau and to provide better connections for students to their tribal identity, culture and language
- Reduce the repayment levels on a student loans
United Future
- Remove tuition fees for tertiary education in New Zealand
- Abolish the student allowance and instead align the maximum living costs loan entitlement with the average rental price in the area a student is enrolled in
- Establish an expected voluntary student loan repayment threshold for graduated students in work, with interest being added to the year if the threshold isn't met
- Introduce compulsory civics education from years 1-13, including information about elections, and lower the voting age to 16
- Review role of student representatives on school board of trustees to ensure meaningful participation