Hekia Parata
21 September, 2012
First National Standards data sets baseline of learner achievement
Education Minister Hekia Parata says National Standards data reported for the first time has set a baseline of Years 1-8 learner achievement.
The data shows that 76 per cent reached or exceeded the national standard for reading, 72 per cent of learners for mathematics, and 68 per cent for writing.
“Of particular interest is the consistency of the achievement trends in writing, reading, mathematics by ethnicity and gender with other system ‘health check’ studies such as the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS).
“So although we are only in the early stages it is exciting that this first set of data is consistent with other international and national information, and that a significant number of children are reaching or exceeding the National Standard in each of the three areas.
“I want to acknowledge and thank parents, teachers, principals, boards for all that they do that makes this possible.”
However, there is also a concerning number of Māori and Pasifika learners who are not meeting the standards. Boys are also over represented in not meeting the standard in reading and writing.
“The information gained from this first set of National Standards data is powerful for identifying and providing support for all learners.
“Up until now we’ve had to rely only on NCEA data – at the end of compulsory schooling – to provide us with a picture of our education system. National Standards data will now allow us to support all learners and target those who are behind much earlier and give them the help they need.
“We have a range of support in place to help learners including Reading Recovery, Reading Together and targeted programmes to accelerate progress in reading, writing and maths.’’
Next Friday (September 28) schools’ National Standards data will be published on the Ministry of Education’s Education Counts website (www.educationcounts.govt.nz) which also includes Education Review Office reports and schools’ annual reports.
A study released by the Ministry of Education yesterday shows that parents, families and whānau want independent and comprehensive information about their child’s school, and regular communication from the school. ERO has also released a new publication to help parents ask schools about how their child is doing.
“Our Government introduced National Standards to raise achievement, to identify children who are behind, to help parents help their children, and help schools to focus on what they need to do.
“Good quality data is absolutely essential if we are going to achieve a system wide lift and ensure all our learners leave school with the skills they need in a modern society.”
Public Achievement Information
National Standards Data – National aggregate
- There are 2,087 schools required to report against the English Medium Standards, of which 188 school have either not yet submitted data or their data is incomplete.
- Māori Medium Education kura teaching Te Marautanga o Aotearoa and using Ngā Whanaketanga will report for the first time in 2013
- The percentages are rounded to the nearest whole number.
- The percentages are calculated across the different learner groups eg in maths 48 per cent (90,376) of the total number of boys (186,989) are “At” the National Standard.
- The Education Review Office’s new publication is available at:
http://www.ero.govt.nz/Review-Process/For-Parents/ERO-Guides-for-Parents/How-is-my-child-doing-Questions-to-ask-at-school

