Ākona: IHC’s Education Campaign

In December 2025 IHC signed a landmark settlement with the Government that acknowledges the education system does not work for many disabled learners and starts a long-term programme to fix it. The settlement is the starting point for change following decades of advocacy.

Families, teachers and principals told IHC over several decades that the education system too often disadvantaged and discriminated against disabled students.  

In 2008, after decades of work with the Ministry of Education to solve the problems, IHC lodged a complaint under the Human Rights Act 1993. We wanted human rights law experts to look at the discrimination that disabled students had experienced for decades.

In November 2025, after 15 years of legal action, IHC and the Government settled the litigation to the benefit of disabled students and their families across Aotearoa New Zealand.  

We worked with families, and the education and disability sectors the whole way and this outcome is a win for all.

What it means

Disabled students have not had an equitable opportunity to enjoy a meaningful education in New Zealand, and this settlement will start to fix that.  

The settlement is confirmation of statements by successive Ministers that the education system is not working for disabled students. The Ministry of Education has agreed to implement a Framework for Action designed by IHC to start to create equity.

Critically, this is win for all disabled students that is based in recognition of their fundamental human right to education on an equal basis to their non-disabled peers.  

This is the start of long-term improvements to how the Government supports disabled students. The objectives are to promote better resourcing policies, initial and ongoing training, systems and support for schools, and teachers, so they have what they need to support disabled students’ learning and participation in school life.

Families expect to send their children with disabilities to their local school with their brothers, sisters, cousins, and neighbours and should receive the same quality of education. And that is what this settlement and the Framework for Action will lead to.

Why IHC campaigned for

Disabled children and young people should be able to enrol and receive an education on the same basis as every other child.

That means having:

We know that when disabled students learn alongside students their age at their local school they are set up for a life of citizenship, community participation and inclusion. Research tells us that non-disabled children also benefit from inclusion; their learning increases along with their values of diversity and inclusion.

For too long, disabled students have been disadvantaged by an education system that does not work for them. We see this discrimination through the following system problems:

The Framework for Action

IHC developed the Framework for Action with Office for Human Rights Proceedings using data and evidence from families, teachers, principals, Government reports, and guidance from international human rights conventions. The Framework is a starting point to create a fairer education system for disabled students.

There is more information about the Framework for Action here.

The stakeholder group

The Ministry of Education has agreed to establish a stakeholder group to monitor its progress in implementing the Framework and provide advice as required. The group will have six to eight members. IHC will have two permanent members of the group, one of whom will chair the group. The Ministry is seeking members with the following attributes:

Members will have the opportunity to engage with work led by the Ministry and give input and feedback on its development.

The group will operate for a minimum of six years. The membership term will be at least three years. The group will meet three times a year (likely in February, June and October).

The Ministry may pay members at its discretion and reimburse travel expenses as required.

You can apply to be a member of this group by submitting an expression of interest before 11 January 2026.

You can send an email to: Enquiries.National@education.govt.nz

With the subject line: IHC Settlement Agreement

Why IHC took legal action

IHC is taking this action as a last resort. We have tried everything else over the years to get a fair deal for disabled children and young people at school. We have:

Bequests brochure -IHCIHC logo

Easy Read: Quality Education for Disabled Students

Download
Bequests brochure -IHCIHC logo

Easy Read: Framework for Action

Download
Bequests brochure -IHCIHC logo

Easy Read: Expression of Interest (EoI) Form Stakeholder Group

Download
A girl with her school bag and folders walking outside

A timeline of advocacy and change

Find out more

Framework for Action

Find out more

News

We want to hear your thoughts about the draft Disability and Learning Support Action Plan
September 28, 2018

Last week the government released their draft Disability and Learning Support Action Plan.

Improved resources needed for diverse learners
September 21, 2018

IHC has welcomed the government’s draft plan to provide individualised support for every child who needs it in the classroom, but cautions it will only succeed if the wider education system becomes more inclusive.

Treasury funding advice discriminates against children with additional needs
September 11, 2018

NZEI Te Riu Roa and IHC are shocked to discover that Treasury advised the Government to scale back funding for children with additional needs, knowing this would mean thousands of children staying on waiting lists for learning support.

Inclusion must begin with early education
September 3, 2018

IHC is calling on the Government to work more closely with the early childhood sector so that young children with disabilities aren’t waiting months for specialist help.

Budget 2018: Learning support funding ‘just tinkers around the edges’
May 17, 2018

IHC is pleased learning support has received a funding boost in today’s education Budget, but says a complete rebuild is needed so that every child gets what they need to learn.

Move to outlaw seclusion rooms overdue
November 3, 2016

IHC welcomes the Ministry of Education’s move today to outlaw school seclusion rooms and continues to advocate for individualised responses to each child’s needs, with schools having more support and direction.

Yet another patch job for children with disabilities
May 11, 2016

IHC New Zealand says new money for teacher aides won’t necessarily mean children with disabilities get the education all children deserve.

More evidence that disabled children aren’t getting a fair deal at school
February 9, 2016

IHC welcomes the survey conducted by NZEI TE Riu Roa of Special Education Needs Co-ordinators (SENCOs) that shows a lack of adequate support for disabled students at school.

Submissions

Submission to the Education and Workforce Select Committee about Education and Training Amendment Bill (No 3)
May 8, 2023

IHC believes that the Bill when enacted has the potential to reduce many of the barriers currently experienced by disabled students.

Submission to High Needs Review
April 1, 2022

IHC says disabled students’ families, and the professionals who support them, are increasingly concerned about a lack of adequate support for disabled students to be at school, and for schools to do their best by them.

Submission to the Parliamentary Education and Workforce Committee’s inquiry into school attendance
September 28, 2021

IHC says disabled students should not be disadvantaged and treated less favourably than their non-disabled peers in respect of their right to attend school.

Submission on Education and Training Bill
February 14, 2020

IHC supports the intent of the Education and Training Bill to establish and regulate an education system that provides New Zealanders with life-long learning opportunities so they engage fully with society.

Submission to the Ministry of Education consultation on legislative changes to; strengthen the right to education and, transfer provisions regarding special schools and rename special schools
June 14, 2019

Submission to the Ministry of Education consultation on legislative changes to; strengthen the right to education and, transfer provisions regarding special schools and rename special schools

Submission on Tomorrow's Schools Review
April 7, 2019

IHC says the education system is not working well enough for our most disadvantaged children and young people.

Submission on He taonga te tamaiti: Every child a taonga - Strategic plan for early learning 2019-29
March 18, 2019

IHC is concerned that the current draft of the plan will not create an inclusive early learning system because it does not establish the reasonable accommodations necessary to ensure children with disabilities enjoy early childhood education and care on an equal basis with their non-disabled peers.

Submission on the Draft Disability and Learning Support Action Plan
October 31, 2018

IHC says the Plan must result in students with intellectual disability having discrimination-free access to, and outcomes from, education at their local school.