About this resource
This page contains information on the consultation on draft subjects for the new Phase 5 Years 11-13 curriculum.
Last updated 10 June 2026
Group 2 draft subjects are now open for consultation. We welcome feedback on Group 2 through to 8 July 2026.
The consultation is taking place in three groups:
- Group 1 subjects: 15 May – 15 June
- Group 2 subjects: 10 June – 8 July
- Group 3 subjects: Mid-July to mid-August
Consultation is an important next step in the development of the final curriculum. All feedback will be considered before the new curriculum is published later this year.
Before making a submission
Below you will find information about the three groups of subjects, with links to both the draft curriculum learning areas and the draft subjects within these.
The draft subject documents outline the proposed content for each subject, including knowledge, capabilities, practices, pathways, subject structure, teaching sequence.
Review the questions before completing the survey
Group 1 consultation subjects
Consultation on the first group of subjects closes on 15 June.
Make a submission on Group 1 subjects
The following subjects are open for consultation under their related learning areas.
Year | Tau | |
English | 11 |
English | 12–13 |
Media, Journalism & Communications | Y12–13 |
Year | Tau | |
Mathematics & Statistics | 11 |
Pāngarau | 11 |
Mathematics | Pāngarau | 12–13 |
Statistics & Data Science | Tauanga me te Mātai Raraunga | 13 |
Further Mathematics | Pāngarau Whānui | 13 |
Mathematical and Statistical Modelling | Te Whakatauira i te Pāngarau me te Tauanga | 12–13 |
Year | Tau | |
Science | 11 |
Biology | Mātai Koiora | 12–13 |
Chemistry | Mātai Matū | 12–13 |
Earth & Space Science | Ao ā-nuku Ao ātea | 12–13 |
Physics | Mātai Ahupūngao | 12–13 |
Agricultural & Horticultural Science | Mātai Whenua me te Ahumara | 12–13 |
Year | Tau | |
Accounting | 11–13 |
Business & Economics | Te Mātai Pakihi me te Ōhanga | 11 |
Business Studies | Te Mātai Pakihi | 12–13 |
Economics | Te Mātai Ōhanga | 12–13 |
Geography | Matawhenua | 11–13 |
Classical Studies | 12–13 |
Religious Studies | 11–13 |
Sociology | 11–13 |
Civics, Politics & Philosophy | 12–13 |
Psychology | 12–13 |
Year | Tau | |
Health Education | 11–13 |
Group 2 consultation subjects
The following subjects are now open for consultation under their related learning areas.
Year | Tau | |
Drama | 11–13 |
Music | 11–13 |
Music Technology | 12–13 |
Visual Arts | 11 |
Visual Arts - Printmaking and Sculpture | 12–13 |
Visual Arts - Design | 12–13 |
Visual Arts - Painting | 12–13 |
Visual Arts - Photography | 12–13 |
Te Ao Haka | 11–13 |
Toi Ataata | 11–13 |
Te Ao Whakairo | 12–13 |
Toi Puoro | 11–13 |
Toi Rēhia | 11–13 |
Year | Tau | |
Physical Education | 11 |
Physical Education | Ngā Akoranga Koiri | 12–13 |
Ngā Akoranga Koiri | 11 |
Te Waiora | 11–13 |
Year | Tau | |
Resistant Materials Technology | 11–13 |
Textiles Technology | 11–13 |
Food Processing Technology | 11–13 |
Spatial & Product Design | Hangarau Hoahoa | 11–13 |
Digital Technologies | Hangarau Matihiko | 11 |
Electronics & Mechatronics | 12–13 |
Computer Science | Mātai Matihiko | 12–13 |
Digital Media | Hua Matihiko | 12–13 |
Year | Tau | |
Te Reo Māori | 11–13 |
Group 3 consultation subjects
The final group of subjects will be open for consultation from mid-July to mid-August.
Webinars
We are hosting a series of webinars for educators on the changes to the Year 11–13 curriculum.
The webinars will cover:
- Process to date
- Curriculum design
- Providing feedback
- Implementation supports
- Next steps
To register for a webinar, please click on one of the session links below and enter your details.
For any questions you’d like answered in the webinars on the consultation process, please email [email protected].
Group 2 subjects - Webinar for school leaders
*NZSL interpreter available
Date | Time | Registration Link |
|---|---|---|
Wednesday 17 June | 1pm – 2pm | |
Friday 19 June* | 1pm – 2pm |
Group 2 subjects - Webinar for Heads of Department and Curriculum Leads
*NZSL interpreter available
Date | Time | Registration Link |
|---|---|---|
Tuesday 16 June* | 3.30pm – 4.30pm | |
Wednesday 17 June* | 11am – 12pm | |
Thursday 18 June | 3.30pm – 4.30pm |
Group 1 subjects - webinar replay for school leaders
Group 1 subjects - webinar replay for Heads of Department and Curriculum Leads
What happens next
This is the second group of subjects for the new Years | Tau 11–13 curriculum to be consulted on. The final group of subjects will be consulted on from mid-July to mid-August.
All submissions will be carefully considered when the new curriculum is being finalised.
The final curriculum will be published later this year and be implemented progressively from 2028 to 2030.
We’ll support teachers and leaders through every stage – getting ready, getting started, and sustaining change.
At a national level, this includes a range of resources and professional development opportunities. At a regional level, this includes our Curriculum Advisory Service who can provide in-person support.
Frequently asked questions
Over 300 subject advisors and reviewers (teachers, subject association members, learning area specialists) across both New Zealand Curriculum and Te Mātauranga o Aotearoa are contributing to the development and refinement of these curriculums.
The draft curriculum was designed using a knowledge‑rich approach, deliberately selecting and sequencing essential disciplinary knowledge, concepts, practices, and capabilities rather than starting from existing NCEA standards or pedagogy.
A clear, coherent progression is being mapped from Phases 1–4 into Phase 5, with explicit sequencing of knowledge and practices across Year 11 and alignment through to Years 12–13 pathways.
Students will be able to access a wide range of subjects many of which will be offered in both English and te reo Māori. At each year level there are also 11 subjects that are deeply grounded in te ao Māori and tikanga Māori, published in te reo Māori. Both Years 12 and 13 will feature at least eight new industry-led subjects.
Design principles acted as quality‑assurance criteria, ensuring coherence, conceptual development, subject‑specific capabilities, and benchmarking against international curricula.
Content choices were contextualised for Aotearoa New Zealand, integrating Te Tiriti o Waitangi principles, bicultural heritage, and local examples while remaining benchmarked internationally.
Design documents developed prior to the draft curriculum documents explicitly defined what was in scope and out of scope, clarifying disciplinary boundaries and avoiding overlap with subjects.
Local, national, and global contexts were deliberately selected to ensure relevance while supporting transfer of learning across settings and future pathways.
The draft curriculum was designed to ensure common learning outcomes across schools, supporting system wide coherence regardless of delivery context.
This detailed curriculum specifies what needs to be taught in a subject throughout the year. This is a shift from learning driven by NCEA standards and will provide clarity for teachers.
The Years 11–13 curriculum is knowledge-rich, nationally consistent, and internationally comparable. It’s designed for Aotearoa, reflecting our bicultural heritage and preparing students to have agency over their life in a changing world.
The curriculum also contains a range of new, updated and exciting subjects for students. For example:
- Years 12-13 Electronics and Mechatronics - In this new subject, students will learn about electronic processes such as circuit design, managing signals and power, and using both analogue and digital methods, as well as mechatronic processes including sensing, actuation, and system integration, and how these approaches enable the creation of intelligent, automated solutions. They will also learn how to investigate engineering concepts and apply systems thinking to contexts such as robotics, automation, smart devices, and sustainable technologies in New Zealand and globally.
- Year 12-13 Music Technology - In this new subject, students will be taught composition, performance, and production using both digital and analogue technologies, while also learning to examine how these technologies have shaped contemporary composition and performance practices over time and how they enhance and expand creative techniques and live performance. They will develop skills in integrating recording, sound design, and music technology tools, and learn to use live sound systems and digital processing to record and produce music across a range of artistic, cultural, and technical contexts.
- Years 12–13 Psychology - one of the fastest growing subjects in secondary schools, students will learn a range of frameworks and approaches for explaining human behaviour and related research and experimentational models. The subject will include critical thinking, evidence-based inquiry, and support students develop capability to know and understand their world.
- Year 11 Business and Economics | Te Mātai Pakihi me to Ōhanga - explicitly connects learning to contemporary economic and business activity in Aotearoa New Zealand. This subject explicitly integrates Te Ao Māori perspectives that emphasise sustainability, community, and intergenerational impact alongside ways of thinking about markets, enterprise and profit.
- Years 12–13 Media, Journalism and Communications - a new senior subject. As well as traditional media studies, it expands into elements of journalism and communications, examining the relationship between media and society. As well as practical production, it explores important ethical issues such as AI usage, data privacy and misinformation in today’s fast-paced digital environment.
- Year 12–13 Civics, Politics, and Philosophy - a new subject that builds on Social Sciences Years 0–11. It weaves together knowledge and practices across philosophy, politics, and civics, and grounded in global, Māori, and Pacific ethical frameworks. It is designed to develop values-driven citizens who can lead and participate with integrity. Students explore traditions such as Aristotelian virtue ethics, Confucianism, kaupapa Māori ethics, and the Pacific way. They will apply practical wisdom to civic and political life, while also learning to evaluate knowledge, AI, and misinformation through Māori, Pacific, and other epistemological lenses, preparing them to navigate a complex, information-rich democracy.
We recognise that some schools, including secondary wharekura, rural schools, and area schools, operate in unique contexts with multi-year classes.
In preparation for the implementation of the new curriculum, the Ministry will work closely with these schools and kura to develop tailored guidance. This will include targeted professional learning and resources designed to effectively support multi-year classroom practices.
The needs of teachers assessing student learning in multi‑level classes are also being considered as assessment guidance for the finalised curriculum is developed.
The new curriculum gives teachers clear guidance on what to teach, so teachers can focus on how to teach it. This reduces uncertainty and workload – and gives more time for quality teaching. It also provides greater consistency across schools to the education content that students and their families can expect to be able to access. In each subject there is opportunity identified for teachers to choose a local/national/global context if appropriate to illustrate the knowledge.
Between now and 2028, the Ministry will be designing the support for Principals, leaders and teachers to confidently implement the changes. Professional learning and resources will support classroom practices.
The final Years | Tau 11–13 curriculum will be published later this year and be implemented progressively from 2028 to 2030, giving schools time to prepare and plan for change.
A knowledge-rich curriculum provides clarity about what students | mokopuna are expected to know, and be able to do, for every learning area and year level. It supports mastery over time by providing content that is carefully selected, sequenced, and is coherent to make sure students build deep transferable understanding.
Teaching and learning are informed by the science of learning, recognising that a knowledge-rich approach is the foundation for skills, reasoning, creativity, and innovation.
Curriculum design informs assessment, while use of assessment to inform curriculum delivery practice is fundamental to the science of learning across all subjects. Through engagement with coherent disciplinary knowledge, learners develop the capability to understand their world, contribute confidently, and shape sustainable futures.
You can watch video explainers about knowledge-rich curricula here - NZC - A knowledge-rich curriculum and TMoA Knowledge Rich Videos.