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NCEA pass rates drop for third year in a row

Author
RNZ,
Publish Date
Wed, 17 Jan 2024, 1:09pm
(Photo / NZ Herald)
(Photo / NZ Herald)

NCEA pass rates drop for third year in a row

Author
RNZ,
Publish Date
Wed, 17 Jan 2024, 1:09pm

Provisional results indicate NCEA pass rates dropped across the board for the third consecutive year in 2023. 

The New Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA) said three years of Covid-19-related disruption were probably to blame. 

Students have been able to access their NCEA (National Certificate of Educational Achievement) results since early Wednesday morning. By 10.30am, the authority said about 28,000 of 160,000 eligible students had done so. 

NZQA deputy chief executive for assessment Jann Marshall said national results would be available in April but provisional figures showed a drop in achievement. 

“The provisional attainment rate in 2023 is lower than in 2022 for Year 11 students entered for a full NCEA Level 1 assessment programme and for Year 12 students working towards NCEA Level 2. Attainment amongst Year 13 students of NCEA Level 3 and University Entrance [UE] was slightly lower than in 2022,” Marshall said. 

“These changes are likely to reflect the compounding impact of three years of disruption from Covid-19. No Covid-related adjustments were made to the qualification or award requirements in 2023.” 

Marshall said attainment figures were provisional because students could request a review or reconsideration of their exam papers, additional results could be received from summer school programmes and schools might submit corrected or late-reported results from internal assessment. 

NZQA figures showed NCEA and UE achievement rates peaked in 2020 for all NCEA levels and University Entrance when extra credits were available, falling in 2021 and again in 2022 as the number of extra credits declined and fewer students were eligible for them. 

Despite the drops, the 2021 and 2022 Level 3 and University Entrance achievement rates were higher than in 2019, before the pandemic began. 

The authority said last year’s NCEA and scholarship exams were across 138 exam sessions in 469 exam centres, including seven in the Cook Islands, one on Niue and three in prisons. 

It said other than the digital exam platform reaching capacity with the NCEA Level 1 English exam on November 10, the overall operation of exams proceeded smoothly. 

-John Gerritsen, RNZ 

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