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The NCEA in the context of the knowledge society and national policy expectations | 262.12 KB |
The introduction of the National Certificates of Educational Achievement (NCEA), as the key school-based components of New Zealand’s National Qualifications Framework (NQF) has been accompanied by controversy around a range of issues.
It seems that much of the debate has centred on surface level symptoms, and has not probed the deep underlying causes of the tensions.
In this article I locate the assessment changes of the NQF/NCEA within the “knowledge society” imperative for “life-long learning” and explore consequences of the expectation that assessment can serve this overarching goal at the same time as the results are used for accountability purposes – that, is for “raising standards”. The tensions created by these conflicting expectations must be confronted openly before they can be resolved.
The full journal article published in:
New Zealand Annual Review of Education, 14, 2004. p. 27-38