But astoundingly, $380 million is announced for some nice-to-haves on a vague timeline, while schools are crying out for the basics. However, the biggest insult was still to come. National plans to spend millions building a computer tool to track children's progress as it happens, based on shonky, arbitrary National Standards, that teachers still despise because of the harm to children's learning and wellbeing.
Requiring teachers to input standardised assessment data across reading, writing and mathematics in real time will reduce the time teachers have with children and increase children's anxiety about learning.
Measurement is not a cause of growth. And by only emphasising a small part of the curriculum (let's call them the 3Rs) as being of importance, everything else suffers - science, the arts, ICT, physical education.
It's low-decile schools that suffer the most because the strengths these children bring to school are not the things that this Government has prioritised with their narrow focus on the 3Rs. Children with special learning needs are particularly disadvantaged - we're still required to assess and report their progress like we would for any other child.
All the New Zealand and international evidence shows that a broad, rich curriculum stimulates thinking and learning across all subjects. As they've discovered in the US, performance in reading, writing and mathematics drops even further when you sideline the "fun stuff" to focus on the 3Rs and constant testing.
Here in New Zealand we have to decide what school assessment should look like and what would work best for our children, with their glorious range of talents and abilities. To make that decision it's imperative that we include the educators who work with these children.
Something as important as the education of our children shouldn't be announced as a party policy without consulting those who will be affected by it, or expected to make it work. Such a move shows a lack of trust in the professionalism of teachers, and doubling down on a policy that we have been fighting against for seven years shows disdain for our professional judgment.
Many principals fought tooth and nail against the introduction of National Standards - some to the point of being threatened with statutory management before they buckled.
We are still standing strong against National Standards by refusing to buy into using the Government's online progress and consistency tool, designed to "improve the reliability" of reporting in a system we believe is fundamentally flawed.
Teachers working in partnership with parents and whanau need to work together to have National Standards scrapped.
Parents have expressed their wariness of National Standards. They want to be partners in their kids' learning and have quality meaningful assessment based on face-to-face relationships within a rich and varied curriculum.
Educators want this too.