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Accelerating progress – Leadership guidance

This resource supports school leaders to plan, implement, and review approaches to accelerate learner progress in years 0-8.

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Tags

  • AudienceSchool leaders
  • Education SectorPrimary
  • Learning AreaEnglishMathematics and Statistics
  • Resource LanguageEnglish

About this resource

This guidance will help school leaders to plan for and review the approaches they use to accelerate progress so learners can access the curriculum and experience success. It is intended for leaders in English-medium and dual-medium schools to support the wide-ranging needs of all learners in relation to the New Zealand Curriculum, years 0-8. The guidance includes resources, tools for reflection, and spotlight stories to help you plan with your leadership teams.

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    Accelerating progress – Leadership guidance

    Accelerated learner progress refers to:

    “ ... advancing the learning of children [who need to build prior knowledge] related to content at their current year level. Accelerated learning is achieved through specific teaching strategies, learning conditions, or scaffolded supports that enable learners to acquire skills more rapidly than they would under ‘usual’ teaching conditions. It relies on continuous monitoring of student progress against benchmarks and progress indicators, ensuring that the learning process remains aligned with year-level expectations.” (Gillon et al, 2024.)

    Any learner may require acceleration or targeted teaching to support their progress during their time at school. As leaders and teachers, it is important that we don’t make assumptions about a student’s need, or lack of need, for additional support. Instead, we provide a flexible and integrated approach, informed by quality information.

    "Accelerating progress – Leadership guidance" helps school leaders plan for and review the approaches they use to accelerate progress so that learners can access the curriculum and experience success. For some leaders, this will be business as usual; for others, it may be new information to add to your knowledge and experience. 

    This guidance is intended for leaders in English-medium and dual-medium schools to support the wide-ranging needs of all learners in relation to the New Zealand Curriculum, years 0-8. Concurrent advice is being developed for those learning through te reo Māori and Te Marautanga o Aotearoa. While schools vary in size, location, and access to resources, the practices in this guide can be adapted to your context so that learner progress drives your strategic approach.

    The guidance includes resources, tools for reflection, and spotlight stories to help you plan with your leadership teams.

    This guidance is organised into key themes for strategically managing the way your school thinks about and responds to the need for accelerated progress:

    • Create the conditions to accelerate progress
    • Use evidence to make decisions about targeted supports
    • Plan effective teaching approaches to accelerate progress
    • Implement and sustain targeted supports

    Each section provides:

    • a brief explanation of the guidance focus
    • opportunities for reflection and/or tools to support planning and further discussion
    • a spotlight story drawing on examples of practice that you might find in school.

    How to use this guidance  

    Use the guidance to stimulate discussion, guide your thinking, and inform you and your team where necessary. You can access each section by selecting the tabs below.

    You could:

    • use the review checklist in the first section as a starting place (see Materials that come with this resource to download the Checklist-for-leaders.pdf) 
    • work through each section sequentially yourself or with your leadership team
    • refer to specific sections that provide guidance in areas where you are seeking more information
    • read the spotlight story at the end of each tab to give you a reference point to compare to your current practice.

    Note that further guidance specifically designed for teachers will be released later in 2025. This will provide specific guidance and strategies for accelerating student progress in both mathematics and literacy for years 0-8.

    Accelerating progress – Leadership guidance

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    Tauwhaituhi ā-kiriataTauwhaituhi ā-kiriata

    When leaders confidently understand what everyday quality teaching and targeted and tailored supports look like in practice, they can support their teams.  

    Leading flexible quality teaching and learning   

    Leaders enable the development and implementation of quality culturally responsive and inclusive teaching in their school.   

    They plan from the position that any learner might need more targeted support over time, so a flexible approach to providing a range of supports is key.   

    For information on how to organise and implement across teams in your school, see the section ‘Implement and sustain targeted supports’.

    Leaders support and evaluate how well the everyday teaching programmes implement the knowledge and skills, informed by the science of learning, as described in The New Zealand Curriculum.   

    Acceleration can be managed through everyday teaching programmes  

    The way your school is implementing the curriculum in your teaching programmes is the starting point for all learners to make progress and accelerate their progress. Accelerating progress can be done through adjusting the whole class programme, as well as providing more intensive, targeted teaching for learners.  

    Many of the principles of the science of learning research reflected in the curriculum, such as a sense of belonging, building on prior knowledge, managing cognitive load, supporting motivation, and social and emotional wellbeing, are integral to effective inclusive design.   

    A comprehensive programme to lead inclusive practice in school can be found on Inclusive Education. It includes guidance on how to use Universal Design for Learning approaches that specifically address principles of the science of learning. 

    Leaders build their teachers’ capability and confidence in:   

    • the skills, knowledge, and explicit strategies expected in curriculum phases, using the teaching sequence and progress outcomes (it is the teacher’s role to scaffold lessons sufficiently as appropriate at each year level. Leaders support teachers to plan to focus on revisiting, reteaching, or consolidating learning)
    • how to use and interpret standardised assessment and other diagnostic information to identify gaps in learning and plan for appropriate next steps  
    • how to plan for targeted teaching using small, flexible groups and work with teacher aides and other learning support specialists as available and appropriate 
    • how to create a classroom culture focused on collective success for all learners that values different cultural identities, knowledge, belief systems, and experiences (refer to Te Mātaiaho | The New Zealand Curriculum for more information on how the curriculum is informed by the science of learning). 

    Pause and reflect 

    • How is inclusive learning practice reflected in the teaching approaches across your school? How might you find out and support your teachers to value different cultural identities, knowledge, belief systems, and experiences and design learning for diverse strengths and needs from the outset?  
    • Do your teachers know how to use information to identify where support is needed and for whom?  
    • Do your teachers know how to plan for and organise flexible groups to enable targeted teaching?  

    Find out more  

    “To support students who have not developed the prior knowledge needed to fully engage with the content of the teaching sequence statements for their year, it is important to find ways to accelerate their progress through such approaches as targeted and explicit small-group teaching.” (Te Mātaiaho | The New Zealand Curriculum, English learning area, p. 27).   

    Leaders help their teams organise targeted supports effectively. Schools manage targeted teaching in different ways and regardless of approach, monitoring implementation is key.  

    The following approaches are likely to be most effective in helping to build learners’ knowledge and skills. 

    Knowing when to provide support  

    Provide targeted, intensive teaching for students with identified needs or strengths sooner rather than later, regardless of their age and stage.   

    For example, recent New Zealand literacy evaluations found that targeted support is more efficient and effective at closing gaps when students are under six years old, and that it can successfully close gaps over a 10-week period starting as early as 10 weeks after students have begun school (Te Mātaiaho | The New Zealand Curriculum, English learning area, p.33).    

    If a large number of learners need help to accelerate progress in a class, the teacher may need to adjust the overall teaching programme. Otherwise, flexible group support may be required to target intensive support to consolidate skills and knowledge. 

    Selecting the learning focus and organising targeted teaching   

    Targeted teaching does not replace the everyday teaching programme provided for the class – learners will be involved in both. The focus will target and consolidate a clearly defined aspect of knowledge or skills required to engage with the everyday classroom programme at the year level.   

    Across your teams, learners’ needs will be determined by information from assessments and other information, in relation to the curriculum expectations and teaching sequence for the year level. Support and review how your teachers:  

    • identify the learning needs and teaching focus based on assessment data and other information (e.g., diagnostic tests, in-class activities, conversations) 
    • identify clear goals and entry and exit criteria that indicate when students will no longer need support in the specific skill or knowledge targeted
    • dedicate time: Consider how you can include this support in your hour each a day for reading, writing, and maths
    • set up small, flexible, and fluid groups of 3-5 learners within a lesson or series of lessons, based on assessment information in relation to the learning focus (e.g., working as a whole class for demonstration and discussion, in smaller groups to discuss a text or investigate a situation, solve a problem in pairs to explain thinking)  
    • take notes during each lesson to notice progress and adapt for the next session (teachers should gather information frequently through formal and informal assessments, checks, questions, and activities to help monitor progress)  
    • ensure groups are flexible and targeted in response to information (teachers should avoid static, fixed ability groups, teaching a narrowed or separate curriculum focus, or attending to only a small range of skills).   

    Read and watch: How to structure small group lessons, with example videos focusing on literacy on The Education Hub.

    How much and how long?

    What intensity, frequency and duration of support is needed?  

    Leaders will support teachers to understand:  

    • the intensity and duration of successful support can vary; however, small group teaching up to 4 or 5 times per week (with 20-30 minute sessions) sustained for a minimum of between 8-11 weeks has been found to be effective for most learners to allow students to internalise and apply new skills   
    • keeping a record of attendance will track consistency and help leaders understand the impact of targeted teaching  
    • the sessions will focus on 1-3 specific focus areas from the curriculum at a time  
    • intensive sessions conducted multiple times a week are more effective than less frequent sessions   
    • increasing intensity of teaching and more sustained interventions may be necessary for children with more complex learning needs
    • as learners get older, targeted support needs to support the wider curriculum programme and build on their existing knowledge and background (specific skill practice is more effective when nested in the wider purpose and context for learning and tutoring one-to-one can be more useful for older learners than small group teaching). 

    Teaching approaches for targeted sessions  

    Leaders support teachers to:  

    • Use explicit instruction: This involves more teacher-student interaction, including frequent opportunities for learners to engage. Explicit strategies include scaffolding, chunking, modelling, and providing positive and specific feedback, and reflect the science of learning in the New Zealand Curriculum. 
    • Create a sense of purpose and achievement: Learners may feel that learning is challenging. Teachers plan for students to experience success in every session, e.g. providing accessible entry points for tasks and activities, setting small achievable steps, and using prompts and questions to help them make connections.  
    • Use the same explicit teaching strategies for new learners of English/bilingual learners as those for all learners: Learners will also need a strong oral language foundation to support their language and literacy development. Build on their current knowledge and home/first language, as well as providing specific focus on vocabulary and comprehension to strengthen language use (Gillon et al., 2024). Use the English Language Learning Progressions and ELLP Pathway to plan targeted language support.  

    Pause and reflect  

    • Share and discuss this information about targeted teaching approaches with your team.   
    • How consistently is targeted teaching delivered across your school? How do you know?   

    Learners may have unique and/or complex needs that require a range of supports (e.g., to remove barriers to the environment, for health reasons, and so on) so that they can access the class teaching programme and make progress.  

    Students with higher levels of need may experience higher rates of progress when they access more intensive tailored support.   

    Tailored teaching does not replace classroom or targeted learning – learners are entitled to access the curriculum at their year level with their peers, and effective supports will be designed to reflect and support the programme underway. 

    Tailored support is typically:   

    • customised for complex or unique needs and supported by trained specialists, such as RTLits, RTLBs, Speech and Language Therapists, in the context of school programmes   
    • more frequent, of greater duration (tailored support is provided for 30 minutes a day instead of 20 minutes and sustained for longer than targeted supports, e.g., up to 20 weeks or more, and may need repeated opportunities to consolidate learning) 
    • intensive, individualised, or in very small groups.   

    Support, particularly when it is one-to-one and is delivered by the classroom teacher, doesn’t have to be in one continuous block of time per 'lesson’. It could be a couple of minutes several times a day, depending on the learning need, (e.g., to reinforce a new grapheme-phoneme correspondence) and the needs of the child (e.g., focusing for long periods of time is difficult). For some, tailored support might be little more than increasing the frequency and length of time of learning sessions.   

    Leaders work with teachers and whānau  

    The learning needs of all students can be met by class- and school-wide strategies. Students with complex or unique needs may also require a support plan that captures the aspects of their learning that need specific support.   

    Leaders and teachers work with whānau and families, alongside learning support specialists, to develop support plans, e.g., an Individual Education Plan (IEP), Collaborative Action Plan (CAP).  

    Read more about developing collaborative support plans with the learners, their whānau, and teachers on Inclusive Education.

    Decisions to offer tailored teaching  

    Tailored teaching will respond to a range of information, such as the following ( a non-exhaustive list):  

    • assessment, diagnostic, and screening information that shows a learner is one or more years behind curriculum expectations for their year level
    • information from targeted teaching in small, flexible groups that the learner has engaged in already is not leading to sufficient progress to enable them to access the teaching programme at their year level 
    • information from whānau and family, from a feeder school, or from community specialists indicate that intensive support is needed to meet needs. 

    Specialist support for schools  

    Supports for schools include Resource Teachers: Literacy (RTLit), Resource Teachers: Learning and Behaviour (RTLB), Resource Teachers Māori, Resource Teachers: Vision (RTV) and Resource Teachers: Deaf (RTD), and Ministry of Education Learning Support Specialists (including Speech Language Therapists and Learning Support Advisors) and Learning Support Coordinators (LSCo).   

    Schools can make requests for support for individual learners as well as support for teachers. For more information, visit Ministry of Education - Learning Support.  

    Whānau are central to decision-making. Their knowledge and skills are critical in supporting learners and connecting to cultures, languages, identities, and needs.   

    Involving families in students’ learning journeys and offering opportunities for collaboration supports positive relationships with learning and is influential in accelerating progress.     

    Leaders can help teachers:

    • listen to what whānau know about their child’s interests, strengths, and needs and what works for them  
    • involve whānau and caregivers in setting goals and agreeing on next learning steps, including how they can support at home  
    • develop a shared language about learning and achievement with students and their caregivers and whānau  
    • value learners’ wellbeing and being genuinely interested in them and their whānau.   

    Leaders evaluate how well these learning opportunities support caregivers and whānau and are aligned between home and school. Be persistent and keep using what works, change and improve what does not work, and transfer what works to support other students and their whānau.  For more information and guidance, read:

    This fictional story is based on real-life examples and research. It illustrates how the leaders strategically plan to support learners to accelerate progress. The leadership practices offer valuable considerations for all schools and settings.

    Two teachers speaking with each other outside, holding student workbooks.

    At Summit View School, our leadership team is focused on ensuring that teachers are planning effective programmes that accelerate progress. To do this, we ask ourselves:   

    1. How do we know that our teachers are planning effective teaching programmes that make an impact and accelerate progress?   
    2. How can we support them in their practice? 

    Goal setting to improve teacher practice  

    Summit View School embraces a structured literacy approach, focusing on strong everyday teaching for all and targeted and tailored teaching strategies to meet the diverse needs of our learners. To ensure that our teaching is continuously improving, each teacher has a professional learning goal within their Professional Growth Cycle (PGC) that focuses on how they are using structured literacy to accelerate progress. Our leaders are active in reviewing teaching and planning so they can be sure that we are implementing our approach consistently.  

    Focused observations of teaching practice  

    For example, we use accelerating progress through a multi-layered approach as the context to reflect on our two critical questions. We went to observe our teachers in our junior flexible learning space during the literacy hours and noted the following.   

    • Flexible classroom teaching – one teacher was leading an engaging, interactive whole class lesson with a focus on building vocabulary and phonics skills. She was teaching the concept of “shelter” through a kiwi bird story. Learners were observed learning the phonetic sound /s/ and identified related words like “sun,” “sand,” and “silly”.   
    • Targeted group teaching – a teacher aide was working with a smaller group, and the focus was on a more specific skill: phoneme manipulation. The learners were observed practising changing words like “sand” to “band” by swapping letters.   
    • Tailored teaching – another teacher, who is released to provide specialist support, was working with two of our learners with higher needs, using phonics exercises to help them progress towards writing words independently.  

    The impact of our approach  

    Our observations, plus records of planning, confirmed that each layer of support—quality everyday teaching, targeted, and tailored—was integrated and effectively meeting the learners’ needs. We saw firsthand how these strategies were being applied to support all students. We can also see this flowing through into warm and constructive conversations with whānau and reporting.   

    Feedback conversations with the teachers showed that they have clear, structured literacy goals within their Professional Growth Cycle and are actively using assessment data and diagnostic tools to plan and refine their teaching strategies.   

    Additionally, through our participation in the regular team learning conversations, we have seen the teachers reflect on successes and challenges. This ongoing collaboration allows them to share insights and continuously improve, ensuring that their practice is always evolving to better support our learners.   

    Looking ahead 

    We’re confident that we are building a strong foundation for effective teaching and accelerated progress. To ensure our teachers are planning effective teaching programmes that make an impact and accelerate progress, we will continue to:   

    • regularly review teaching programmes  
    • facilitate learning conversations with each other, our learners, and their whānau, that promote reflection and collaboration, using quality information  
    • align our school-wide inquiry with the Professional Growth Cycle.   

    Pause and reflect 

    Read the spotlight story above and consider:  

    • What role does the school leader have in this scenario?   
    • As a leader, how do I know that teachers are planning effective teaching programmes that accelerate progress?  
    • What might your next steps be so your shared commitment to quality teaching and learning is evident in your processes, programmes, and practices?