An Introduction To NCEA English
An Introduction To NCEA English
An Introduction To NCEA English
What is NCEA?
NCEA is the main qualification for secondary school students in New Zealand.
NCEA stands for the National Certificate of Educational Achievement and it comes in three levels: 1, 2
and 3 which students work through from years 11 to 13.
With NCEA, there are still important national exams (called external assessment) at the end of the year
but your child will also be tested, or assessed, throughout the year – that’s called internal assessment
because it happens “in” school.
With NCEA, subjects are divided up into ‘standards’ (achievement standards and unit standards).
These are all the things students need to know and be able to do.
Each standard is worth credits – and credits count towards the final qualification. A subject such as
level 1 English may be made up of between four and ten standards, worth a total of 20 or more credits.
Instead of doing one three-hour exam on the whole subject of English, a course could include a
standard in formal writing (such as a job application) and another standard in creating and delivering a
speech. Some of these standards will be tested in an exam at the end of the year and some will be
assessed during the year.
Students can build up credits during the year – or even over more than one year – and once they have
got credits, they last forever. Students can keep track of how many credits they are collecting as they
go along.
Level 60 c
Level 1: 80 credits at level 1 or above,
including 10 credits in literacy and 10 credits in numeracy.
Aim high
Remember 80 credits is the minimum. Encourage your child to aim for more than 80 credits.
If they get at least 50 of these credits with Merit or Excellence – they’ll get Merit or Excellence included
on their certificate – it’s called Certificate Endorsement.
That will help when they’re showing results to people after they’ve left school – with getting a job or
getting into the tertiary course of their choice.
Credits from some work may count towards more than one qualification and all credits count towards
NCEA. Some qualifications can be completed at school and others your child may start at school and
then finish in the workplace or at a tertiary institution.