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  "description": "“I’m here, and I’m not going to be slowed down by a union.”",
  "path": "/stanford-blinks-after-accusing-curriculum-critics-of-playing-politics/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-05-16T22:50:27.000Z",
  "site": "https://goodoil.news",
  "tags": [
    "Centrist",
    "pic.twitter.com/YuhMPJ9j2z",
    "May 16, 2026",
    "Stuff",
    "The NZ Herald",
    "Receive our free newsletter here",
    "@NZNationalParty"
  ],
  "textContent": "Summarised by Centrist\n\n**Education Minister Erica Stanford has slowed parts of the Years 0-8 curriculum rollout less than a month after accusing unions and principals of being more interested in “political left-leaning agendas” than student achievement.**\n\nThe government had planned to mandate new science, social sciences, health and physical education curricula from 2027, with arts, technology and languages from 2028.\n\nThat timeline has now changed.\n\nSchools will need to start implementing science and social sciences from 2027, but full implementation can happen across 2027 and 2028.\n\n> NCEA isn’t working. We’re replacing it with a simpler, clearer qualification. pic.twitter.com/YuhMPJ9j2z\n>\n> — NZ National Party (@NZNationalParty) May 16, 2026\n\nHealth and physical education, arts, technology and languages have been pushed back to 2029, with full implementation required by the end of 2030.\n\nAt the same time, the government is pressing ahead with a major overhaul of senior secondary qualifications, replacing NCEA with the New Zealand Certificate of Education and the New Zealand Advanced Certificate of Education.\n\nThe new system will require compulsory exams in every Year 12 and 13 subject, with students needing to pass at least three subjects annually and achieve a C grade or higher to pass each subject.\n\nThe delay to the junior curriculum follows what NZEI called a “sustained campaign” against the pace of reform.\n\nLast month, NZEI and more than 30 education groups warned the changes were being rushed through with little consultation and risked overwhelming schools.\n\nStanford dismissed the criticism at the time, saying: “I’m here, and I’m not going to be slowed down by a union.”\n\nShe also accused critics of being “too worried about their own political left-leaning agendas” rather than student achievement.\n\nBut in an email to principals this week, Stanford said she had listened to feedback from schools and principal associations about the pace of implementation.\n\n**Read more over at** Stuff**and** The NZ Herald\n\nReceive our free newsletter here",
  "title": "Stanford blinks after accusing curriculum critics of playing politics",
  "updatedAt": "2026-05-16T23:45:38.441Z"
}