“To put it into perspective, in Term 4 2023, just under 80% of learners at Northland College were chronically absent. For the same period in 2025 that figure has been reduced by nearly 60% ... Anecdotally, the Ministry of Education leadership has advised that this is the best performance for at least seven years,” he said.
The attendance improvement coincided with stronger NCEA results.
In 2025, 73.5% of students achieved NCEA Level 1, up from 25.8% in 2023. At Level 2, 59.6% achieved the qualification, and in Level 3 there was 74.4% attainment, a significant increase from the 29.4% the previous year.
When measured against schools in the same equity band, Northland College performed above comparable schools at all three NCEA levels
Edwards said the results reflected collective effort from staff, whānau and students, adding that “90% of success in any part of life is just about turning up”.
The school has maintained a continued focus on attendance in 2026, with clear responsibilities set for leadership, teachers and parents.
He urged parents to send children to school every day, engage with teachers and promote educational success at home.
Teachers are expected to closely monitor attendance data, follow up unexplained absences and celebrate positive attendance.
Alongside academic gains, the school is expanding curriculum options. The number of students studying subjects virtually has more than doubled from five in 2025 to 12 this year, broadening course availability.
Professional learning and development priorities for staff are also being confirmed, alongside a school-wide teaching and learning philosophy.
Edwards said the focus remained clear.
“The school, its leadership and staff are totally and collectively focused on the young people enrolled at Northland College succeeding,” he said.
“Together the school and whānau can achieve anything.”
He said a school-wide teaching and learning philosophy and approach is being set in place and some exciting additions to curriculum choices are on offer.
“I wish to congratulate the Northland College community, the hard-working teaching and management staff, the parents and caregivers for getting their children to school and most of all to the learners for being teachable.”