Expert Panel To Review Secondary School Qualifications Changes
PPTA Te Wehengarua has announced the establishment of a panel of highly experienced and diverse educationalists to monitor and review major changes to New Zealand’s national secondary school qualifications.
The Government is expected to announce the final changes soon.
“These are once-in-a-lifetime changes that have significant implications for the futures of our young people and for Aotearoa New Zealand, so it’s imperative that they are educationally valid, robust and meet the needs of all learners,” says Chris Abercrombie, PPTA Te Wehengarua president.
The panel includes experienced educators, academics, sector leaders, people with a sound understanding of Māori education and the equity index. It represents diverse opinions on senior secondary school assessment.
Kate Gainsford, former chair of the Secondary Principals’ Council and former principal of Aotea College, and Melissa Denzler, Kaitohu Mātauranga/Education Advisor for the NZ Council of Educational Research, will co-chair the panel.
Kate Gainsford says she looks forward to working with panel members to help ensure that these far-reaching changes to secondary school assessment and qualifications are being developed and implemented thoughtfully and comprehensively.
“Proposals that are thin on detail and tight in timeframe, work against good policy and risk short-changing the important sense of public ownership that characterises a strong education system.”
The panel’s findings will be contained in a report, Tirotiro Anō (“with fresh eyes, wide open, we are taking a fresh look”).
“This initiative demonstrates the vital role that secondary teachers and principals play, via PPTA Te Wehengarua, to be at the forefront and leading the best aspects of educational change and improvement.
“The panel and the report enable the secondary teaching profession to reflect thoughtfully, and in a timely way, on the significant changes to secondary school assessment and qualifications – our bread and butter.”
It is planned that the panel’s report will be presented to PPTA Te Wehengarua annual conference in October.
*The name, Tirotiro Anō, provides a link to a report initiated by PPTA almost 30 years ago that reviewed major changes to the secondary school qualifications which resulted in the National Certificate of Educational Achievement
Tirotiro Anō panel members
Claire Amos –Principal of
Albany Senior High School
As a principal, Claire has
overseen innovative assessment approaches that ensure
validity, rigour, and relevance. She is an experienced
educator with extensive experience in curriculum and
assessment design and delivery at system and school levels,
including direct involvement with the NZ Qualifications
Authority (NZQA) on the realignment of NCEA standards and
future state advisory work.
Claire has held governance
roles with Netsafe, the Education Council of Aotearoa, the
NZQA Future State Brainstorming Group, and advisory roles to
government and the tech sector.
Andrew
Basher – Principal of Buller High
School
Andrew will contribute a sound understanding of
rural NZ secondary schooling as well as experience in
working within the NCEA environment as a teacher, marker,
panel leader and moderator over many years. Andrew was a
member of the Equity Index Sector Reference Group (2020 –
2022) and has been an NZQA Panel Leader – Level 1
Mathematics (2005 – 2023).
Gavin
Brown - Professor (Educational Assessment),
Auckland University
Gavin is Director of the Quantitative
Data Analysis and Research Unit and Hub leader of the
Learning Sciences and Psychological Studies. He is a member
of the Technical Overview Group Assessment (TOGA) at NZQA
and was a member of the Technical Advisory Panel, Ministry
of Education Equity Index Model
(2018).
Melissa Denzler (co-chair)
– Kaitohu Mātauranga/Education Advisor for the NZ Council
of Educational Research (NZCER)
Melissa is wāhine
Māori, and an educator who is committed to uplifting the
mana of our people, our mātauranga, and the diverse
worldviews that shape Aotearoa. At NZCER, she contributes to
kaupapa Māori and equity-focused projects that centre the
voices of those most affected by systems change. She works
extensively within the sector to support equitable use of
assessment and data practices.
Karen
Dobric – Deputy Principal, Papatoetoe High
School
Karen brings deep knowledge and experience in
secondary, tertiary and vocational pathways. She has served
as Co-Chair for the MOE Pathways Advisory Group and was the
only representative from secondary on the NZQA Review Panel
for the Level 1-4 Foundation and Bridging Qualifications.
She also served on the Scholarship Processes Advisory Group
and helped found the Aotearoa Foundation Skills and Pathways
Association. Karen is an academic researcher and secondary
educator.
Natalie Faitala – Head of
English at Wesley College and PPTA national executive
member
Natalie has made significant contributions to
NCEA, curriculum reform, and sector consultation, including
service on NZQA’s Taupulega Pacific Advisory Group, the
NCEA Professional Advisory Group, Review of Achievement
Standards, Subject Expert Group for English, and the Te
Mātaiaho English Curriculum Writing
Group.
Kate Gainsford (co-chair) -
Former Principal of Aotea College and Secondary
Principals’ Council chairperson
Kate brings a wealth of
educational experience and sector leadership. The system and
operation of assessment for qualifications in the senior
secondary school is of particular interest to Kate. She
first served as PPTA’s representative on the Scholarship
Review Group in 2005 and has been a representative of many
national reference groups convened by the Ministry of
Education, NZQA and ERO to provide advice and feedback from
the sector and communication back to the
sector.
Pip Osborne - Kaiārahi for
Technology Education New Zealand (TENZ) and a Professional
Teaching Fellow at the University of Auckland
Pip has a
strong background in national curriculum and assessment
development, NCEA changes with MOE, and moderation support.
She has been an NCEA regional lead and NCEA implementation
facilitator. Pip’s work spans secondary, vocational, and
tertiary pathways.
Katy Thorne –
Leader of Mathematics at Aquinas College
Katy has been
directly involved in the Numeracy and NCEA Level 1 pilot
programmes. These have given her both insight into the
intent behind recent changes and a clear understanding of
their practical implications in schools.
Katy’s wider
involvement as PPTA Branch Co-Chair, PPTA Regional Women’s
Representative, and President of the Bay of Plenty Maths
Association has enabled her to build strong relationships
across the sector and engage deeply with teacher voice,
assessment issues, and curriculum
priorities.
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