Much has been written over the past six months or so about Erica Stanford’s education agenda, based on sterling work by Bevan Holloway, Brie Elliot, and the Aotearoa Educators Collective, among others.
What is becoming more and more apparent is that Stanford’s agenda, based solely on external influences, is creating a huge risk to education in this country. This has now gone beyond the stage where it is a political matter, as the damage she is causing, and will cause, will affect all children regardless of the political background of their families.
We are not using a political agenda in raising our concerns as this concern is above politics. Stanford is carrying out a very risky experiment with the education of our children, based on a very narrow set of principles, most (all?) of which are not supported by the great majority of educators, whether academics, principals, or teachers. It is imperative that all readers of this article set aside their political beliefs to reflect on the content of the linked article.
While the basic information is known, more information is emerging:
The imported ideology behind education reform
“For half a century, our public education system has been hailed as world-leading. International recognition praised our system for being increasingly adaptive to the needs of tamariki, their whānau and communities, shifting in response like a braided river over our diverse landscape.
We developed a child-centred system focused on a broad education. Māori have led the way in kaupapa Māori education and kōhanga reo, and both our early childhood and primary curriculums have had global influence.
Why now, are we being asked to channel this river, to narrow it in accordance with the values and power systems of other colonial countries?”
A little correction – the implementation of New Zealand’s world leading public education system began with Dr Clarence Beeby, Director of Education for the first Labour government in the 1940s. This continued until1989, under both Labour and National governments, both of whom had the wisdom to see what was being achieved and to keep it free from political interference.
For example, two New Zealand teachers from the 1950s, Elwyn Richardson and Sylvia Ashton-Warner, received international acclaim for their innovative teaching. There is absolutely zero chance of that happening under the educational system that was imposed on schools in 1989, and especially under the current proposals.
This worked well until the 4th Labour government came into power and destroyed it all, along with many other aspects of our country.
“Recently, Te Akatea, the Māori education leadership group, called a summit of 200 kaiako and tumuaki, iwi and education leaders. The task of this group, called Te Akapūmau, was to come up with a plan to protect the place of Te Tiriti o Waitangi in our education system.
It was a response to the Minister of Education Erica Stanford’s education reforms, which have been a series of backwards steps for educators who’ve spent decades advancing Te Tiriti o Waitangi in education.”
In light of my comments about this not being a political issue, there was a very significant speaker.
‘Chris Finlayson, a former National Party MP and Treaty negotiations minister, addressed the group, advising them to “engage in civilised debate” and to avoid using terms like “white supremacist”’.
Get the point? Do I need to spell out the implications of Finlayson’s involvement?
After discussion of the needs of Māori education the article then moves to examining the background to the new curriculum.
“So, if a “knowledge-rich” curriculum isn’t grounded in te ao Māori and the very people and things that make Aotearoa unique, who is determining the knowledge and where does it come from?”
And now we cover familiar territory:
‘The New Zealand Initiative, a right-wing think tank and member of the Atlas Network, has long lobbied politicians in Aotearoa to adopt, in education, what is known by conservatives and right-wing groups in the US and UK as “core knowledge”.
In April 2023, before the coalition government came to power, The New Zealand Initiative released its education manifesto, Save our Schools. It pushed for a prescriptive, nationalistic, “knowledge-rich” curriculum based on this “core knowledge”.
Pākehā sociologist of education Elizabeth Rata from Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland, wrote the foreword to the manifesto, claiming: “Communities are for the transmission of cultural beliefs and practices. In contrast, as the Manifesto makes clear, schools are for the transmission of academic knowledge and for the socialisation of children into the democratic nation.”’
Which cultural beliefs did Rata have in mind? Clearly, from other statements she has made, these are most certainly nothing to do with Māori and a lot to do with English beliefs and values.
As for her second sentence, what exactly does ‘socialisation of children into the democratic nation’ mean? I suspect readers of this article will have wide ranging interpretations of that.
‘The manifesto’s recommendations now read like the government’s to-do list, having made their way directly into coalition agreements — from downgrading Te Tiriti o Waitangi in the Education Act to gutting NCEA, and including the number one recommendation: “Introducing a new knowledge-rich curriculum.”’
As Bevan Holloway has established, Rata was heavily involved in the development of a new English curriculum.
‘In a speech written by Rata and emailed to Stanford, she made explicit her hopes that Stanford’s reforms will be the “circuit breaker” to “ending decolonisation’s success.”’
Did we vote for this?
‘This has been compounded by the ministerial advisory group’s recommendation that: “Te Tiriti o Waitangi, our nation’s founding document, be removed from the curriculum and replaced with the science of learning.”’
That is a complete overturning of the principles on which this country was established. Other than the racists out there, are the rest of you comfortable with, and accepting of that?
As we know, Stanford flew to the Core Knowledge Foundation’s conference in Florida in June to talk about the her educational reforms. Amongst the attendees was the ‘guru’ of the knowledge rich education movement,
“E D Hirsch, author, former English professor and founder of the Core Knowledge Foundation.
Hirsch’s work influenced the education reforms of everyone on stage in Florida. Each politician thanked him.”
And
“For decades Hirsch has said that multicultural and social justice education produces achievement gaps, claiming students are taught to be victims. He also contends that child-centred education creates knowledge deficits. Central to Hirsch’s work is his insistence on a set canon of knowledge that all American children must learn to be successful citizens and patriots”.
I wonder what canon of knowledge all New Zealand children will be required to earn to successful citizens and patriots? Elizabeth Rata would seem to have that covered.
“Hirsch’s theory is described, and the knowledge itself specified, in his book, Cultural Literacy: What every American needs to know, which has been published several times since the 1980s.
It has been roundly criticised by educationalists and social justice advocates for its sexism, and for disregarding First Nations’ knowledge and languages, and presenting a Eurocentric colonial account of history.”
Substitute ‘Māori’ for ‘First Nations’ and you have the New Zealand Initiative/Erica Stanford’s education agenda.
Again I ask, are you comfortable with this?
‘When Stanford addressed Hirsch on stage, she explained the profound impact his 1996 book The Schools We Need and Why We Don’t Have Them had on her. “It changed everything. I made my Secretary of Education read it. I made my staff read it. I am now implementing huge reform in New Zealand based on your book . . . We have a knowledge-rich curriculum.”’
Consider the implications of this – Stanford is basing all her education policy on one book. So much for the very extensive New Zealand and international research on best practices in education. She seems to have no understanding at all of what education is about, and had no vision until she happened to read this book – any suggestions how she came to read it?
One of the other speakers was Robert Pondiscio:
‘Pondiscio, believes the purpose of curriculum is to catalogue the “knowledge assumed by literate speakers and writers” and that for students to succeed, they need to acquire the “culture of those who are in power”’.
Whose culture would that be?
‘Hirsch’s foundation produced the Core Knowledge Language Arts (CKLA) curriculum which 25 states in American now recommend, the result of intense lobbying and the passage of state by state Science of Reading bills. CKLA provides scripts for teachers to deliver tightly controlled content taught in “scope and sequence.”’
I’ve written before about teacher directed learning, and here it is, specified by Hirsch, who, as we have seen, is Stanford’s ‘guru’.
Note this section:
“The Heritage Foundation, the right-wing think tank behind Project 2025, are also enthusiastic supporters of Hirsch’s work and are informing many of the authoritarian and anti-democratic measures being introduced into policy across America.’
For people living under a rock, Trump, in spite of his denials, is basing many/most of his policies on Project 2025.
Is this what we want for New Zealand, to become a satellite of internal USA politics? Yet this is where the current government’s policies are taking us, and education is no exception.
‘Alongside these reforms is the claim that teaching children the same content, the same way at the same time, regardless of their community, culture, or learning needs achieves a supposed equality. Stanford’s recent claim that “every brain learns the same” was widely refuted by educationalists and disability advocates.
On stage in Florida, Stanford said: “No matter what culture . . . what family you’re from, you have the very best possible instruction, the very best possible curriculum, a knowledge-rich curriculum based on the science of learning . . . that’s the reforms we’re driving.”’
There is no science of learning, as Guy Claxon has explained. There is indeed a discipline that could be described as the sciences of learning, that encompasses all the areas of research into how people learn. Using the phrase ‘the science of learning’ to justify these sweeping curriculum changes is devious at best.
As we know, Elizabeth Rata is a major influence on Stanford’s thinking and her agenda is clear.
‘“If we are to value knowledge again, we should look to the Enlightenment for the moral and intellectual courage that created the modern world and the rational individual.”
Rata laments that “New Zealand was built on this intellectual commitment and moral courage. Yet in the 21st century we are failing our founders’ vision. . . . Nowadays very few of us are prepared to defend the type of knowledge that makes us modern. To do so invites vitriol and accusations of racism.”’
What ‘founder’s vision’ is she referring to?
Also, there it is again, her belief that eurocentricism should be the foundation for our education system.
“Eurocentrism refers to viewing the West as the center of world events or superior to other cultures. The exact scope of Eurocentrism varies from the entire Western world to just the continent of Europe or even more narrowly, to Western Europe. When the term is applied historically, it may be used in reference to the presentation of the European perspective on history as objective or absolute, or to an apologetic stance toward European colonialism and other forms of imperialism.” (Wikipedia) .
As the linked article explains:
‘For years, Dr Elena Aydarova, Assistant Professor of Educational Policy Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, has tracked the power behind the global spread of these fundamentalist Eurocentric “core knowledge” education reforms.
She addresses the science of reading and learning theories that these reforms always cite: “Yes, indeed there is a knowledge base in neuroscience and cognitive psychology, there are journals and societies [about this], but what happens in policy around the world has less to do with those societies . . . it is much more an ideologically-driven reform that is led by conservative think tanks, curriculum publishers and tech companies.”
Aydarova concludes that the reforms can be distinguished as “a corporate movement that is really rewriting what is happening in schools . . . it is not just about profit . . . it is a much bigger project that is about social and cultural change”’
That is Stanford’s agenda, summarised in one paragraph, and in that we can also see the influences of the New Zealand Initiative and behind that, the Atlas Foundation.
To reiterate my earlier comments – this has gone far beyond a political debate. The whole structure and underlying vision of New Zealand education is being destroyed to meet external agendas.
All people, regardless of whether they see themselves on the left, in the centre, or on the moderate right of politics, should be very concerned.
Are you?



Underpinning the primary curriculum with concerns of the powerful is indeed something to vigilant about. Whatever those concerns of the powerful may be: knowledge, competencies, culture, values. Examples exist in history where it hasn’t ended well. Prewar Japan is one that readily comes to mind, where years of ideological content resulted in a populice which was brainwashed to believe in a national myth. We certainly dont want to go down this path.
Yet, ever since universal education in the West – indeed other places also – it could be argued that one purpose of education is to mould a compliant populice willing – more or less- to accept the status quo. With the exception of Marxist inspired educators such as Frierre, who sought to foster a degree of criticality among the illiterate, in a context somewhat different to our own. Not surprisingly, powerful governments in control of education systems have done little to encourage the principles of participatory education in schools.
That said, tension exists. And that’s a good thing. Schools one would hope are trying to foster some degree of criticality, some degree of questioning the status quo. We need independent thinkers. If this were cease to be the case there would really be cause for concern.
There’s a lot to take in about the proposed changes to the primary curriculum in NZ. Standardization and all that that means. Knowledge rich – whatever that means. Focus yet again on the basics. The nature of cultural content in an increasingly multicultural and multilingual environment – at least where I am. Fostering natIonal values and civic duties. Even PE teachers are pitching in.
As long as kids can read and write and have a scientific view of the world, we will be fine.
99% of the knowledge kids need to survive and thrive in the world is the same all over the world.
Cultural knowledge is nonsense.
The previous government removed explicit mention of maths, chemistry ,physics in the science curriculum. Now that would really place us at risk as a first world country.
you write like a robot – did an AI write it? Education is not all about STEM and many students will fail if you force it on them. The arts, literature, history, social studies, anthropology, and cultural knowledge have just as much value to society, some would say a greater value, as a philosophical sounding board to rationalize against the borg like automatons of “progress at all costs”. How do you suggest we approach the looming energy crunch? With dreams of technology or with social adaptation and cultural knowledge?
Mark What is this ‘Cultural knowledge is nonsense’.??! Are you AI rather than a person?. I hate to see such unthinking nonsense appearing here.
We are attempting to cope with a constantly shifting mind environment – our world is changing at an unprecedented rate. We need imaginative thought, not diecast edicts from heads affected by the mental disease, the sweep of unprecedented madness, at present. Think while we still can and consider our wide world and not your bit, hiding in a tower firing dead words through arrow slits.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/world-news/360868053/australian-state-where-every-teacher-could-soon-earn-least-114000
Welcome to Australia New Zealand teachers.
The previous government to the last Labour government introduced National Standards.
The tool by Standford would essentially be a return to a form of national standards, a policy introduced in 2008 under John Key’s National government.
Under this policy, children were compared against the level of achievement expected for their age and time at school. The goal was to improve results across the education system.
The policy was ended by Labour in 2017 after there was little improvement in international testing results and several criticism from the sector. The National Standards in their Seventh Year survey of teachers and principals found just 16% of respondents said the standardised testing had a positive impact.
So Standford has returned us to a system that we know failed. How is that progressive? It is arrogance to believe reading, writing and science are the only subjects that will make the world a fine.
Your view sounds like a typical Anglo-Saxon one Mark.
‘Cultural knowledge is nonsense.’
Exactly that is why Mao Ze Dong had a revolution to get rid of it.
Also why the Chinese Communist Party makes sure those pesky minorities (‘Uyghurs, Tibetans, Mongols Manchus) get rid of their cultures.
‘The previous government removed explicit mention of maths, chemistry ,physics in the science curriculum. ‘
BULLSHIT!
I worked as a teacher under the previous government. I taught all those subjects then, Students learned them and went on to use them in real life. Introducing Maori language components did not stop anyone from learning.
WTF are you talking about?
I appreciate everyone has the right to be stupid but you really do abuse the privilege.
Marks right wing neoliberalism is not unusual and straight from Trump’s playbook. National good Labour bad.
Never let facts get in the way of a good story. His is an opinion devoid of facts.
I agree with your comments. Why limit our children’s education by eliminating cultural references. How foolish. It all serves to enrich their knowledge, not decrease it.
Stanford wants our education to be riddled with references from Europe and USA, but not NZ. Narrow-minded at best.
I was listening to Stanford talking to Huskins on the wireless the other day, and all she talked about was arriving in Sydney with no luggage and waiting to queue up outside David Jones at 9am to buy some makeup and foundation.
It would be nice to have a minister of education that had a greater agenda than to plug up all the cracks in her face so she could venture outdoors to showboat.
True Rangi her comments to get makeup for her face show how shallow she really is and what about the cracks in her education policies.
‘…that’s the reforms we’re driving.’
If Stanford actually said that, it proves she has a poor knowledge of English and therefore isn’t the best person to be making decisions for our children’s education.
To allow the disastrous American education system to have any influence on ours, would be a grave disservice to our children.
Great article Allan. It is clear we have fundamentalist conservatives taking a blow torch to our evidence based system and burning it with backwards looking reckons. Academia and Justice are the two areas they always attack first whilst adjusting the economy to serve them alone.
Trouble with Erica Stanford is she believes her own hype and she acts as if she’s the best thing since sliced bread. Sad but true. If you look across this government there is not one likable persona in either of the 3 parties sad but true. The backbenchers are like nodding dogs smile and wave sad but true. Wouldn’t it be marvelous if the smiles were wiped off all their faces in 2026. Happy days
The concept of cultural literacy is not unique to American authors, nor to rightwing hacks.
Permit me to recommend Bildung: Keep Growing by Lene Rachel Andersen
Education is often a fraught issue, but the world leaders in it are not so much in NZ (except Warwick Elley), as in Scandinavia. That would be on the basis of learning achieved in minimum student time. We are well behind.