Principals and teachers         strongly agree that the Government’s fast-track mandating of two major         curricula changes by the start of 2025 is requiring too much change too         fast, an NZEI Te Riu Roa survey released today says.
Overwhelmingly, school         leaders and teachers said the under-resourcing of a wide and complex         range of learning needs of around 30% of their students was the key         issue that needed the Government’s attention, and which made the pace         of the curriculum changes unmanageable. 
In a member survey         conducted over the first two weeks of September, 77.5% of principals         and 73.7% of teachers said change was happening too fast to be         effective. 
“It is         unsustainable. As a principal in my fifth year in the role, I cannot         see that I can sustain this level of work or stress for much longer         unless something drastically changes. The worrying thing is, I feel         like this already, before trying to hurriedly implement two new         curriculum areas at the start of next year. It is simply not         manageable.” 
“It is important         that we implement change with integrity. The current pace of change is         a barrier to this happening. I am concerned that we will end up with         rushed implementation that undermines both teaching and learning.”  
“It is NOT         doable. I am teaching full-time and being a principal early morning and         late at night. I cannot cope with all these changes as well as         everything else.”  
67% of teachers and 63%         of principals said the curriculum changes would not do anything to meet         the real needs of kids in their school. 
“If teaching was         maths, writing and reading, and the other important learning areas, and         students were all learning at approximately similar levels, no problem…         It's when society expects us to parent, provide psychological support,         toilet train, manage anxiety, be trauma informed, and maintain our own         work-life balance — there are not enough hours in the day.” 
 “I have watched         and waited for years to see greater specialist availability and special         needs support that can be accessed in a timely manner. Sadly, it gets         worse per year, not better. So many neuro-diverse pupils and so little         diagnosis and / or resourcing, it is exhausting our amazing teachers,         they will all leave if this keeps up.”  
"Student outcomes         are linked to lack of support, so the pace is one thing but neglecting         the needs is the worst part — how are all children going to achieve         without support?” 
Schools reported a median         of 30% of their students having additional learning needs. Just 1.1% of         principals said these students were well-supported in their school,         with 76.4% saying there was partial but inadequate support. 
There was strong concern         about the pace of change, even when educators supported the new         curricula: 16.6% of teachers and 18.8% of principals thought the         changes would impact positively, but only 6.2% of teachers and 5.3% of         principals thought the pace of change was “about right”. 
“The workload of a         principal is absolutely enormous, as is the stress. I fully support the         Government's initiative but to do the implementation well, we need time         and better support for our children with additional need.” 
Principals and teachers         were also concerned about the increased work demands of implementing         two new curricula simultaneously. 52.3% of principals and 37.5% or         teachers said they were already working 51-60 hours a week, a third of         teachers were working 41-50 hours a week, and 23.6% of principals were         working 61-70 a week. 
36.3% of teachers and         52.3% or principals said they thought the new curricula would require         significantly more hours' work a week on top of these hours, and 21.1%         thought it would require two to five hours' more work a week. 
Both teachers and         principals said a lack of learning support for students with learning         needs and new government initiatives were among their top stressors at         work. 
This is backed up by OECD         research that shows the share of teachers that report “quite a lot” or         “a lot” of stress related to changing requirements from the national         authorities is above the OECD average.* 
Notes:
749 principals and 4,809         teachers completed the survey. All survey responses are quoted         anonymously. 
*OECD Economics Surveys: New         Zealand, 2024. Fig 4.6 p88.
Recent media releases
- 
											
	
Removal of clause requiring school boards to give effect to Te Tiriti ideologically-driven
The Minister of Education’s decision to remove the requirement for school boards to give effect to Te Tiriti o Waitangi is a part of the Government’s project to erase all…
 - 
											
	
Attack on independence of teaching profession
Minister of Education Erica Stanford’s announcement today that she is removing core functions of the NZ Teaching Council and reducing elected members is an attack on the…
 - 
											
	
Rushed and Eurocentric: Schools face curriculum crisis
The new draft years 0-10 curriculum is Eurocentric and the rushed rollout will create chaos in schools, education union NZEI Te Riu Roa says.