Educators want UE review

A big drop in the number of students able to study at tertiary level has prompted calls for the New Zealand Qualifications Authority to review whether new University Entrance (UE) requirements are having the desired effect.

More than 20,500 Year 13 students - 58 per cent - achieved NCEA Level 3 last year. That's the new entry level requirement for students wanting to go to university, which is down from 71 per cent in 2013 and lower than 10 years ago when 64 per cent of students gained UE.

Education Minister Hekia Parata has defended the new requirements, saying they were well flagged and a drop was expected.

However, Universities New Zealand head Chris Whelan said the size of the drop was surprising and the Post Primary Teachers Association (PPTA) wants the qualifications authority (NZQA) to review whether the changes ensure university students have the skills and ability to succeed, as intended.

Mr Whelan said his organisation, which represents New Zealand's eight universities, had been pushing to raise the standards for UE, as it was not fair for young people to be given the wrong signals about whether they would succeed at that level.

However, he was surprised by how many students failed to meet the new requirements and Universities NZ was working with government organisations to ensure students who could succeed hadn't been given bad advice and taken the wrong courses last year.

Mr Whelan said some past students who had gained UE had dropped out of university because they were not academically capable, which was unfair.

"UE is supposed to be a way of signalling that you are ready for university and if you apply yourself you'll probably succeed."

Ms Parata said the changes, announced by NZQA in August 2011, had been signalled for three years.

She said students who had not achieved UE and wanted to study at university could talk to tertiary institutions and NZQA about foundation and bridging courses.

While that would add time and cost to their study, under the old standard too many school-leavers were failing papers.

PPTA president Angela Roberts agreed that changes made to lift the bar for UE were a good thing, but was concerned about a narrowing of what was acceptable for students to use towards gaining admission to the tertiary education providers.

By Susan Strongman of the New Zealand Herald

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