Reflections on Ako Aotearoa Defunding 2025: When the State Forgets Its Tertiary Teachers

Ako Aotearoa Defunding

Ako Aotearoa Defunding

There’s a silence that settles after a budget cut.
Not the silence of efficiency.
The silence of something sacred being deemed… optional.

This week, the Government confirmed that funding for Ako Aotearoa — the National Centre for Tertiary Teaching Excellence — will end.
ALNACC too.
That’s my team.
December 31st will mark the final chapter of one of the most important educator support systems this country has known.

Let’s be clear: Ako Aotearoa wasn’t perfect. No institution is.
But it stood for something.
It stood for the idea that teaching is more than content delivery. That learners deserve not just funding models — but teachers who are resourced, reflective, and supported in their craft.

It stood for learning as relationship. For excellence as a cultural act.
And now, it’s gone. Or, at least, it will be soon.

The Government’s message is not subtle.
In a “tight fiscal environment,” excellence is expendable.
In a metrics-driven era, pedagogy has no profit margin.
And in a system increasingly dominated by scale and compliance, care… becomes cost.
And for those who remember, we’ve seen this all before.


But something else is true too:

When the state forgets its educators, we remember each other.

I’ve spoken to colleagues across the country in the last few days — people in ECE, in literacy, in trades, in universities, in kaupapa Māori spaces. The grief is real. But so is something else.

A stirring.
A quiet defiance.
A question being asked in rooms and on calls and in private message groups that starts like this:

“What if we built something else?”

Not another programme to be cut in three years.
Not another silo with a budget and a countdown.

Something intelligent.
Something adaptive.
Something that remembers who we are and who we teach for.

You may not see it yet.
But I can tell you — it’s already being written.


There is no rescue coming from above.
But maybe, just maybe, there’s a system rising from below.

A whisper in the data.
A pattern in the grief.
A new shape in the smoke of what’s just been burned.

We will teach on.
But not the same way.
And not waiting for permission.

Watch this space.


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Comments

15 responses to “Reflections on Ako Aotearoa Defunding 2025: When the State Forgets Its Tertiary Teachers”

  1. Anne Alkema Avatar
    Anne Alkema

    Well said Graeme (as always). I am cross and sad that the funding for Ako’s work and the work of the Manako team in particular has been taken away. I would like to be able to say “unbelievable”, but unfortunately in the current environment it is one more believable thing happening in the education.

    1. Graeme Smith Avatar
      Graeme Smith

      Thanks, Anne! I appreciate that you have been such an advocate for our work over the years. It’s like a pattern repeat from the NCLANA experience.. However, every problem is an opportunity…!

  2. Mary MacLeod Avatar
    Mary MacLeod

    It’s such short-sightedness to make financial cuts to two of the pillars of society – education and health. If there is a quiet resistance, I will be watching for it!

    1. Graeme Smith Avatar
      Graeme Smith

      Thanks, Mary. You are right. And both of those pillars are hard to sustain without some kind of contribution from the state. It makes me feel conflicted because the state funding is both a curse and a blessing. However, I am convinced that the govt funding in both areas correlate directly with stifling innovation and creativity, and causing groupthink and “lock-in” of outdated ideas. Looking on the bright side, this decision from this government is going to force more than a few changes. However, it’s unfortunate that it comes at a time when our national levels of literacy and numeracy are in free-fall in comparison with other countries.

  3. Christina Avatar
    Christina

    Thanks, Graeme. Needed that today.

    1. Graeme Smith Avatar
      Graeme Smith

      Kia kaha e hoa!

  4. […] But all of it has stayed… tethered.To us.To the moment.To the budget line.To the system that forgets as fast as we build. […]

  5. Sam Waugh Avatar
    Sam Waugh

    During my time wokring with Y Education, Ako Aotearoa has supported myself and our tutors on many occassions, and will continue to do so this year – 20 workshops booked in as of today for my Christchurch team. Without this, we a self-reliant on doing the research to be better informed and subsequently improve the outcomes for our taiohi. Who is going to do this now? We will continue our mahi to the best of our ability but the ‘Teaching Excellence Centre’ being cut further disenfranchises our sector (particularly, Youth Guarantee funded programmes in my context) and our youth. My eyes and ears are open to a transformative solution to ensure the tertiary sector maintain guidance of Ako’s calibre.

    1. Graeme Smith Avatar
      Graeme Smith

      Thanks, Sam. Appreciate the comments. Working with PTEs has been a bit part of my mahi including the work with Ako Aotearoa. The good news is that the people with the expertise aren’t going anywhere

  6. Jennifer Leahy Avatar
    Jennifer Leahy

    Love this Graeme – thanks for sharing.

  7. Graeme Smith Avatar
    Graeme Smith

    Kia ora Jennifer. Appreciate it. Cheers, GS

  8. […] I wrote about this in Reflections on Ako Aotearoa Defunding 2025: When the State Forgets Its Tertiary Teachers. […]

  9. […] the last few months, while the sector has been grappling with change — some of it necessary, much of it painful — we’ve been quietly building. Not just responses. […]

  10. […] In 2026, my anchor contract disappears. […]

  11. […] the defunding of Ako Aotearoa, the country lost more than a research funder. It lost one of the only national […]

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