Why is Erica Stanford Importing One Size Fits All Curriculum Ideas from Overseas?

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In a recent article “Why Is the Government Implementing New Zealand Initiative Policies?” I explored the influences of the New Zealand Initiative on government policies, especially in Education.

Minister of Education Erica Stanford has proven close ties to the New Zealand Initiative, especially Dr Michael Johnston, and her wide ranging changes to the provision of education in New Zealand very closely follow Johnston’s recommendations.

BUT:

There is a lot more behind Stanford’s drive to reshape education than just the New Zealand Initiative, and this is even more concerning.

Stanford has tapped into an international education movement and is busy implementing their education agenda here. I’m sure that people didn’t know that by voting for National in 2023, they were voting to sell out our unique education to meet an overseas agenda.

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Let’s unpick this.

Earlier this year Stanford posted on her Instagram account a photograph of her with former Conservative Secretary of Education Michael Gove. Gove was Secretary of Education in the first years of the Cameron government and he caused mayhem to the schooling in UK. In 2011 I was in regular contact with a number of British teachers so I heard plenty about the ideologically driven destruction he caused. Anyone who views Gove as a role model seriously lacks judgement of character.

A thread about Gove’s influences on education was posted on BlueSky by Sandra Leaton Gray, Professor of Education Futures at the UCL Institute of Education. 

I’ve selected a number of these (and highlighted a few) that have relevance to New Zealand. I’ve also added a few comments. 

Read through them and spot the similarities to Stanford’s policies.

  • Michael Gove reshaped English education more than any minister since 1944. His reforms continue to structure the present despite many changes of Government.
  • His project was clear; a knowledge-rich curriculum, tougher examinations, and rapid academisation These reforms were presented as “rigour”, but they centralised authority and intensified pressure on schools.

Note: Academy schools are the UK’s version of charter schools. As with Seymour’s proposals, many schools were not given any option but to become academy schools.

  • The paradox was autonomy that was not autonomy. Schools were promised freedom, yet the conditions of that freedom were tightly controlled by Whitehall.

This has parallels with the introduction of ‘Tomorrow’s Schools’ in 1990. Schools were promised freedom to implement their own ideas and values based on the wishes of their communities, then Wellington got so scared by that that they introduced compulsory School Charters that locked schools down, taking away most of the so-called freedoms.

  • This origin is telling. Redistribution gave way to approved forms of evidence. Instead of directly addressing material inequality, the money was invested in testing pedagogy.

For example, National Standards back in 2011.

  • The emphasis was on phonics, feedback, mastery mathematics, all methodological interventions rather than structural reform. Poverty, workload, and regional inequality remained at the margins.
  • After 2019, EEF increasingly presented the knowledge-rich curriculum as a project of social justice, arguing that the disadvantaged require access to “powerful knowledge”
  • Yet this framing introduces contradictions. Literacy trials show that phonics can raise scores, but gaps persist because poverty and home resources are untouched. Mastery mathematics delivers small gains, yet regional divides between London and the North remain entrenched.
  • In other words, we are fixing the wrong problem. Curriculum and pedagogy are treated as levers for equality, while the material conditions of inequality go unaddressed.
  • The lesson is stark. Whether traditionalist or progressive, no curriculum or assessment reform will reduce inequality unless redistribution, workload and accountability are addressed directly. Without structural change, we are rearranging the system while leaving its inequalities intact.
  • The danger is not Gove’s reforms alone, but the diminishing of debate they produced. When evidence and equity are deployed in particular ways to defend the same narrow political script, real alternatives are rendered invisible.
  •  Meanwhile in England, child growth is faltering under the weight of poverty and poor nutrition. Studies link early income poverty to long-term cognitive deficits of up to 13 IQ points. No curriculum reform can compensate for malnutrition.
  • Until material inequality is confronted, “rigour” rests on fragile foundations. That is Gove‘s legacy.

Stanford, and the current government, are taking New Zealand education, particularly primary schooling, down this road, to meet an ideological agenda that has little basis in evidenced based research. 

A key statement is that addressing inequality (including providing healthy and tasty lunches, unlike Seymour’s slop) is a vital first step to enhancing education achievement – something which was recognised by the first Labour government with their state housing, family benefits paid to mothers, free medical care, milk in schools, and free dental care for children. 

Wouldn’t it be nice to have a similarly visionary Labour Party in 2025?

This isn’t the first time a National party Minister of Education has gone to worship at Gove’s feet. Back in in 2011 either Anne Tolley or Hekia Parata made the same trip.

If the link to Gove isn’t enough to raise your concerns, there’s more. 

Recently Brie Elliot posted another video on Facebook.

Knowledge-Rich or Culture-Poor? A Look at NZ Schools

“They’ll tell you Kiwi education is in crisis… but the facts tell a different story. NZ beats Australia, Finland, and the UK in reading. So why are we importing a one-size-fits-all curriculum from overseas? Let’s unpack the Hirsch/Gibb playbook and why Te Tiriti o Waitangi matters more than ever.”

Apologies again for those of you who have stayed out of Zuckerberg’s clutches and therefore can’t watch this. 

Here is a transcript of her video – again I’ve highlighted some sections and added comments.

“Our education minister Erica Stanford just took a trip to Florida to meet the people behind the ‘knowledge rich curriculum’ craze in late June 2025.

Stanford shared a stage with a lineup of global ‘edu-celebrities’.  The Core Knowledge Foundation’s national conference panel was titled ‘No boundaries, Just possibilities:  A worldwide Call for Action for Knowledge Building in Education.’

Her fellow panelists:

ED Hirsch Junior – he’s the father of the knowledge movement  – think fact before feelings 

Sir Nick Gibb, the UK‘s former school minister known for pushing phonics and declaring dead, white men vital curriculum content

Gibb has continued Gove’s work.

Robert Poncio, a big in the American enterprise Institute, where knowledge is power means exactly their knowledge

 And could it get better:

Paul Givan from Northern Ireland was there saying his reforms closely follow Stanford’s playbook .

So why are we talking Shakespeare and structured literacy?  Because Stanford is pushing the same knowledge rich science of learning agenda back home and she’s not whispering it. She’s broadcasting it.

She’ll tell you that Kiwi education is in crisis. 

Here’s what the facts say.  New Zealand is above the OECD average in reading writing and science, we out performed the UK Australia and Finland. We’re behind top performers like Singapore, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea 

Is it a crisis or is it a convenient excuse to import a one size fit all curriculum? 

This is where Te Tiriti comes in.

The Education and Training Act 2020 makes it very clear – schools and boards must give effect to  Te Tiriti which means embracing tikanga Māori and Maatauranga Māori and te Reo Māori in your curriculum.

You cannot import a strait jacket curriculum without accounting for that.

So if this knowledge bandwagon sidelines Māori knowledge, boards have both a legal and moral duty to fight back. 

Reading this, I think we can expect a change of legislation to remove this requirement in the not too distant future.

Knowledge rich curriculum doesn’t sound bad until you realize it’s a British Americana type import that sidelines Māori knowledge and acts like Māori stories are completely optional.

Do we want UK centric facts or do we want knowledge that’s rooted in our land, our language, and our treaty? That’s the real question.

So Erica, if you are gonna copy and paste policies from overseas conferences, maybe you could start with a country like Finland, where they actually invest in teachers in public schools properly, and trust their educators, instead of importing a British bloke’s obsession with Latin verbs.

Because here’s the thing, Te Tiriti is not a line in a history book. It’s a legal promise and last time I checked, there’s no clause in The treaty that says replace local values with a curriculum from the UK.

 If we want kids to succeed maybe let’s try listening to the communities that we actually have here. 

Wild idea I know.”

I remember the days when New Zealand primary schooling led the way, when overseas educators would come here to see what we were doing. 

Now we are reduced to mindlessly implementing an overseas derived curriculum that will disempower Māori voices, or as Elizabeth Rata says, to recolonise our curriculum – bringing back a curriculum based on a white, predominantly male, Anglo-Saxon world view, a conservative world that dislikes change and that is fighting to retain the dying hegemony of the Anglo-Saxon/western dominated world that is in its death throes.





34 COMMENTS

  1. The good ol’ days you Lefties hanker for did not work. There is plenty of evidence, should you care to look at it, that standards in academic achievement have cratered. But, Mr Bradbury, you carry on as though doing the same things over and over again are somehow going to fix those problems.

  2. Thank you for acknowledging that some of us have not fallen into Zuckerberg’s traps, nor into any other kind of social media. We text and receive phone calls. We don’t care for influencers or the opinions of the world’s idiots.

    We don’t want UK/US/atlas centric education. We had that when I was growing up and to finally see some recognition of our NZ background coming out in children’s school readers was wonderful. Children still learn to read with local stories.
    Whatever is really holding them back needs to be discovered and dealt with. Nothing will improve, if that’s not done. However, sounds as if the plan is to gloss over specific learning difficulties.
    I wouldn’t not have thought Florida or anywhere in the US would be the place to find excellent educational models.

    For Stanford to admit they need to solve the real problems as to why children may not succeed at reading and school in general, is to admit that her govt. has failed to tackle the economic problems we actually face and has made them worse. She’ll waste a lot of time and money chasing rainbows, trying not to embarrass her ‘brilliant’ boss. She’s a complete waste of space and so is her programme. IT WILL FAIL.

  3. I left school knowing how to read and write and speak but we (Maori) faced discrimination when it came to getting many jobs because Pakeha preferred to employ people who looked like themselves first regardless of whether they were NZers, we call it white privilege. I failed in our school certificate education system where we were forced to learn Shakespeare. However, I studied as a mature aged student, this was when I first learnt about the TOW among other things we were never taught at school in the 60s and 70s. Now it seems we are going backwards again.

  4. If we can get the same level of improvement in NZ education that the Gove reforms delivered for the UK NZ parents will be very happy.

  5. Actually, it is just another instance of the regime doubling down on colonialism in every possible sphere: education, health, foreign policy, trade and commerce… everything. Foreign powers now write New Zealand government policy, school curricula, text books and even statute law. Have we forgotten that New Zealanders were writing their own text books more than a century ago and that New Zealand formally asserted its right to determine its own foreign policy as far back as 1947? Are we going to accept that these elementary features of nationhood have been stripped away? Are we to allow the regime to proceed to its ultimate endgame of reducing New Zealand to such a state that it “has to be” absorbed into the Commonwealth of Australia?
    I think not, and the regime should think again.

  6. They are trying something new because the current system DOES NOT WORK. My kids are in school now. From teachers only being in class 60-70% of the time, students in my son’s year 9 english class being illiterate ( they needed my son to explain the error message they got on Roblox when they were supposed to be learning, and they only know most of their games by the visual icons) and children in my daughter’s year 7 class claiming math is a scam and parents being told NOT to assist their children in homework unless we have been to training courses because the school only teaches a specific way and any other type of instruction is wrong and will only confuse them I can confidently say that the current system is failing.

    They are already teaching 1 size fits all and it is very poor. I make no comment on the incoming system as I haven’t completed all the reading yet, but something has to change.

  7. Q Why…? A. Follow the money and look at how Paula Bennet has done!! There’s no higher values there – modern woman views performance at the top and recognition for oneself, as the pinnacle of ambition.

  8. If Maori history and the relationship between Maori and settlers had been included in our history teachings from day one we would be a far more enlightened society today.

  9. Yes, something will be changing Andrew2 it will be the fucken useless government that is destroying our country.

  10. Yes, something will be changing Andrew2 it will be the fucken useless government that is destroying our country.

  11. Today, on the Radio, the Minister saying its our problem not her!s, that kids come to first term primary,and can!t hold a book up the correct way, then going on to advise parents teach your children, look into their eyes, when speaking to them, eye contact is important.
    Is this a Prefect out off her depth, or the dance of a desperate Minister, to patronize, and hope for homage.

  12. Educating for the future. That’s the big challenge. We all know the the 20th C is behind us. What’s now needed in terms of basic skills, knowledge and skills for the workplace, whether these be professional or vocational? Indeed what will a future workplace look like? What does a national curriculum need to look like, at least at secondary level? And what is particular about an isolated country in the South Pacific – albeit distance is no longer the tyranny is used to be – now increasingly multicultural and where wealth disparity is greater than ever. Brave decisions are needed. Not necessarily a new assessment regime. Certainly not ideological tinkering. But also decisions that serve all young people – irrespective of their capabilities. In its broadest sense education as a public good. And crucially – as the link asks – who decides?
    https://theconversation.com/ncea-reform-how-will-schools-decide-who-takes-an-academic-or-vocational-path-262797

  13. I’m interested to see the assertion that NZ education outperforms Finland – that runs against most data I’ve seen. And, the only reason NZ can rank close to top Asian education performers is that we exclude our educationally or mentally challenged from the results – whereas they mainstream theirs.

    I like Shakespeare – he’s one of the best things English has to offer. Kurosawa thought so too.

    It is inevitable that Erica Stanford borrows others’ ideas about education, because, like her colleague Willis, she has nothing worthwhile of her own. None of which makes a silk purse out of the NCEA.

    • Evidently Finland’s PISA results are not what they used to be 20 yrs ago (if this link is to be believed) – but is not doing so badly

      https://www.aqa.org.uk/aqi/finland-pisa-a-fall-from-grace-but-still-a-high-performer

      The reasons: with increased immigration a more diverse society than previously; comparatively less spending on education as student numbers grow,; a shift away from a former curriculum more aligned to PISA outcomes

      But still above the OECD average (proviso as above). And interestingly enough, when NZ is substituted for Finland in the PISA calculator, NZ “outperforms” Finland on reading

      https://www.oecd.org/en/publications/pisa-2022-results-volume-i-and-ii-country-notes_ed6fbcc5-en/finland_6991e849-en.html

      But its all stats. Some reference is to aggregate scores. Some reference the top 10% percentile; some reference to low performing students. Your coffee goes cold trying to get your head around it all.

      Anyway, its all gobbygook dressed up as science. PISA is an OECD measure. OECD is a neoliberal thinktank.

      The take home messages for me this morning is that curriculum reform in NZ and the shift away from NCEA seems to be a move towards a system that is more closely aligned to OECD objectives. These changes are no surprise given the government of the day. But it’ll all come at a cost – maybe it’ll improve NZ’s rankings in the future – just maybe- but who’ll be left behind. And who says that it’ll all transfer to economic wealth anyway. Historically we are not Finland, not Singapore, not Japan. The second message is reinforcement of AA’s original claim that ‘one size fits all’ in education never works. A lookalike system closely aligned to OECD objectives is a bad idea.

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