A - E
20 hours ECE
20 Hours Early Childhood Education (ECE) is a higher rate of funding for services to cover the average full cost of providing early childhood education.
20 Hours ECE enables services to provide early childhood education to 3-year-olds, 4-year-olds and 5-year-olds for up to a maximum of 6 hours per child per day and 20 hours per child per week without charging fees.
Parents must attest on the enrolment agreement form that their child does not receive more than 6 hours per day and 20 hours per week of 20 Hours ECE as a total across all services the child attends.
20 hours ECE hours
20 Hours ECE Hours are the fully subsidised hours that the child receives.
Services are eligible to claim up to 6 hours per child per day, to a maximum of 20 hours per child per week.
20 Hours ECE funding is based on the child rather than the place they occupy in the service.
20 Hours ECE hours are funded at a higher level to cover the full cost of providing ECE.
Absence rules
Rules set by the Ministry to limit funding that may be claimed for children permanently enrolled at a service who are either continuously or frequently absent. Absence funding cannot be claimed for children who are casually or conditionally enrolled.
The 2 main absence rules are:
- the Three-Week Rule for Continuous Absence and
- the Frequent Absence Rule.
Actual entitlement
The total amount of funding paid to each licensed service in March, July or November.
A service’s actual entitlement is the product of their advance funding for the coming 4 months, plus their ‘wash-up’ funding for the previous 4 months.
Advance funding
The proportion of a service’s actual entitlement that is paid on the basis of predicted enrolments for the forthcoming 4-month period.
The amount of advance funding paid is based on the average funded child-hours (FCHs) for the previous fourth months, the number of days the service will be operating in the forthcoming 4 months, and the funding rate at which each FCH will be paid.
75% of this total is paid as the advance payment (or 100% for kindergartens).
All employed
From 1 October 2024:
The term all employed, in relation to the Minimum Salary Scale for Certificated Teachers, means all certificated teachers who are permanently employed either on a part-time or full-time basis to work in a teaching or management role in the service (i.e., they are working for hire or reward under a contract of service).
The term excludes teachers who are fixed term or casual employees or teachers employed by a third party and used by services through a contract with the third party.
All-day service
A service where at least 1 child attends for more than 4 hours on any day.
Annual top-up for isolated services (ATIS)
An income top-up for small, licensed early childhood services, that are located in isolated areas.
All licensed services with an Isolation Index of 1.65 or greater, and that generate less than $20,000 per annum in ECE Funding Subsidy, 20 Hours ECE
Funding and Equity Funding payments are eligible to receive the ATIS.
Attest (20 hours)
Certify that specific information is correct by signing the attestation section of the enrolment agreement form for this purpose.
Parents can attest as part of the enrolment form that their child does not receive more than 6 hours per day and 20 hours per week of 20 Hours ECE as a total across all services the child attends.
Attest (Certificated teacher salary)
Certify what criteria an education and care service or hospital-based service is using to determine the minimum salaries it pays to all employed certificated teachers.
Education and care services and hospital-based services will confirm what minimum salary criteria they have met when completing their RS7 return.
Attestation (of certificated teacher salaries)
A declaration that details what salary scale all employed ECE and primary qualified certificated teachers' minimum salaries services will be paying.
Audit
An official examination and verification of accounts and records.
See also funding claim audit and record audit in the Glossary.
Authorised signatory
A person with a linked unique electronic signature.
Base funding rates
The set of funding rates available to education and care services and hospital-based services that do not pay all employed certificated teachers according to the full salary scale criteria described in section 3-B-2.
Calendar days
Consecutive days, including weekends and public holidays.
Calendar month
All the calendar days in a month, from the first day of the month to the last day e.g. 1 July to 31 July.
Casual education and care service
A service that operates without a regular roll, for example, services at ski fields.
Casual enrolment
Enrolments for children who will not be attending a service on a regular, ongoing basis.
A casually enrolled child is recorded as ‘casual’ on their enrolment agreement form.
Funding for casual children is based on attendance only.
Certificated teacher
A ‘certificated teacher’ is a holder of a current practising certificate that has been issued by the Teaching Council, or a letter from the Teaching Council advising that certification has been approved and that the practising certificate will be mailed within 4 to 6 weeks.
A practising certificate can be marked:
- Tiwhikete Whakaakoranga Tūturu | Full Practising Certificate (Category One).
- Tiwhikete Whakaakoranga Pūmau | Full Practising Certificate (Category Two).
- Tiwhikete Whakaakoranga Tōmua | Provisional Practising Certificate.
- Returning to Teaching in Aotearoa New Zealand Practising Certificate.
Note: For ECE funding purposes, ’certificated teachers’ must have
- a NZ ECE or primary teaching qualification and a current practising certificate, or
- an overseas qualification assessed by NZQA as comparable to a NZ ECE or primary teaching qualification and a current practising certificate, or
- a letter from the Teaching Council with a clear ECE or primary “endorsement” (where registration has been gained through the Council's discretionary pathway), and a current practising certificate.
Certificated teacher hours
The total number of hours worked by certificated teachers in a service when they are counted towards regulated (ratio) staff.
This measure is used for teacher-led centre-based services only.
Certificated playgroup
A certificated playgroup is a group that has met the curriculum, ratio, premises and facilities, health and safety practices, and administration standards set in the Education (Playgroups) Regulations 2008.
Education (Playgroups) Regulations 2008 – New Zealand Legislation
Child-place
Each place for a child for which a service is licensed.
Child-places may only be used by 1 child at a time but may be used by more than 1 child during the course of a day. Child places are limited to the maximum number of children noted on the service’s licence.
Funding can only be claimed to a maximum of 6 hours per child-place per day, up to 30 hours per child-place per week.
Community-based service
A service that is a community-based service prohibited from making financial gains that are distributed to their members including:
- an incorporated society
- a charitable, statutory, or community trust
- a registered charity
- owned by a community organisation (e.g. a city council, church, or university)
- considered a Public Benefit Entity under XRB requirements.
Conditional enrolment
Enrolments of children who are on a waiting list and that are above the service’s licensed maximum number of child-places. Conditionally enrolled children attend in the place of an absent permanently enrolled child provided the licence maximum is not exceeded at any one time.
A conditionally enrolled child is recorded as ‘conditional’ on their enrolment agreement form.
Use the information below to find out if you can fill extra child-places with conditionally enrolled children:
- If your licence is for children aged 2 and over only, you may fill empty places with children aged 2 or over. You must not fill empty places with children aged under 2.
- If your licence is for mixed ages, you may fill empty under 2 places with children of any age. You must not fill empty 2 and over places with children aged under 2.
Coordinator
The person who has primary responsibility for overseeing the education and care, comfort, and health and safety of the children in a home-based service, and for providing professional leadership and support to educators within the service.
Discretionary hour
A discretionary hour is an hour that a service can claim an Other Teacher as a Certificated Teacher for the purposes of the Staff Hour Count.
Services that must complete the Staff Hour Count may record the hours worked by relievers who are Other Teachers as Certificated Teacher Hours for the purposes of the Staff Hour Count for up to 80 hours during the funding cycle.
Discretionary situation
Either a situation in a parent or whānau-led service funded at the quality rate when a qualified reliever is not available to replace a qualified parent or whānau member who is absent or a situation in a home-based education and care service funded at the quality rate when a coordinator is not available to replace the specified coordinator of the service.
A discretionary ‘situation’ includes any situation where coverage was not available, including lunch breaks, sessions, or full days of operation depending on the operating structure of the service.
Donation
A donation is a voluntary payment. There is no obligation to pay and no enforcement of payment.
Dual enrolments
Children who are enrolled at more than 1 early childhood service.
Children must not be enrolled for the same times (e.g. between 9am and 1pm on Mondays) at more than 1 service.
Early childhood staff form
A form showing the actual hours worked daily by regulated (ratio) staff in an education and care service.
The early childhood staff form is required to manage the Staff Hour Count.
ECE funding subsidy
The primary form of government funding for early childhood education services.
It is a ‘subsidy’ because it is paid to assist services in meeting their costs but is not intended to cover a service’s total cost.
Early learning information (ELI)
The Ministry of Education’s Early Learning Information (ELI) system collects and stores information on enrolment and attendance in early childhood education. Licensed early childhood services send information to the Ministry of Education through their Student Management System (SMS) or Ministry’s secure ELI Web application. Funding may be withheld in part or in full if a service does not submit a completed and accurate ECE Return by the due date.
EC11
Application for change of service quality rate for early childhood services.
Home-based services and parent/whānau-led services seeking a change from the standard funding rates to quality funding rates (or vice versa) must apply to the Ministry using this form.
EC11-A
Notification of change of qualified persons for early childhood services.
Home-based services and parent/whānau-led services funded at quality rates must complete this form when there has been a change in home-based care coordinator, or in qualified parents/whānau at a parent/whānau-led service.
EC12
Application for exemption from absence rule for special and/or health needs.
Services seeking an exemption from the absence rules for a child with special and/or health needs must complete this form.
An EC13 or other supporting documentation may also be required for the exemption to be approved.
EC13
Medical certificate to support application for exemption from absence rule for special and/or health needs.
This form should be used to document the medical reasons behind an exemption from the absence rules. It must be completed by a registered medical practitioner.
EC15
Application to receive Equity Funding for providing early childhood education in a language and culture other than English.
Services seeking Equity Funding under Component C: Language and culture other than English (including sign language) must complete this form.
EC20
Application for a transitional advance.
The transitional advance form (EC20) is used to calculate advance funding for services in a number of situations such as:
- services beginning or ceasing to offer 20 Hours ECE
- licence mergers or increases
- significant increases in enrolments.
Education and care services
A teacher-led centre-based service that is not controlled by a kindergarten association. Education and care services are required to operate with high proportions of certificated teachers.
Individual centres can be known by many names, including creches, aoga amata and childcare centres.
Educator
A person who provides home-based education and care, as defined in the Education (Early Childhood Services) Regulations 2008.
Education (Early Childhood Services) Regulations 2008 – New Zealand Legislation
Electronic signature
In relation to information in electronic form, used to identify a person and indicate that person’s approval or agreement.
Emergency closure
When unexpected emergency circumstances force a service to close temporarily.
Enrolment record
The formal written agreement between a parent or guardian and a service that a specific child will attend that service at specified times. An enrolment can be permanent, casual or conditional.
Equity funding
Equity funding is targeted funding to improve access to, and participation in quality early childhood education. Equity funding is available to licensed, early childhood services that meet specific eligibility criteria.
Equity funding is paid to eligible services in addition to the ECE Funding Subsidy and 20 Hours ECE.
Equity index (EQI)
A statistical index that measures the extent to which an early childhood service draws children from low socio-economic communities. The EQI is used to determine eligibility for Equity Funding.
The EQI is worked out on the basis of enrolled children’s addresses and information taken from the New Zealand Census 2006. The EQI for casual services is determined using the average for all other ECE services in the same area.
Extended parity salary scale
The salary steps required to be attested to in order for a service to receive extended parity funding rates.
F - J
Fee
A fee is a payment that is required as a condition of enrolment and can be enforced.
Enforcement is when a service withholds or withdraws enrolment, or withholds or withdraws parts of their service (for example children not permitted to take part in certain activities), or makes debt recovery.
Funding rates
The dollar amount of funding that a service is paid for each funded child hour (FCH).
Funded child hour (FCH)
An occupied child-place that is funded for 1 hour.
Services may be funded the ECE funding subsidy (Under 2 and 2 and over) for up to 6 FCHs per child-place per day, to a maximum of 30 FCHs per child-place per week.
Services may be funded 20 hours ECE (20 hours ECE hours and plus 10 ECE hours) for up to 6 FCHs per child per day, to a maximum of 30 FCHs per child per week.
Funding claim audit
A type of audit conducted by the Ministry of Education’s Resourcing Auditors.
It is an audit of the amount of funding claimed and received by a service.
This audit is known as a ‘funding claim audit’ because examination of enrolment records and attendance registers against the RS7 Return is a primary component of the audit.
Funding rate table
A table provided by the Ministry which shows the funding rates for all early childhood services.
A copy of the Funding Rate Table can be found in Appendix 1 and will be updated each time there is a change to the rates.
Funding rates
The salary steps required to be attested to in order for a service to receive full parity funding rates.
General purpose financial statements
The style of financial statements that must be completed by community- based services. They should include statements of:
- accounting policies
- financial performance (profit and loss account) that includes specific reference to the funding received from the Ministry of Education
- financial position (i.e. a balance sheet)
- movements of equity
- notes about equity funding and how this has been spent (when applicable).
Home-based ECE services
Early childhood education services where early childhood education is provided for up to 4 children in an educator’s home, the child’s own home or a home nominated by the child’s parent.
Home-based services are supervised by coordinators who are certificated teachers.
Homes are grouped together in a service, the person or organization that operates the group of homes is the service provider.
Home-based educator top up payments
Home-based educators may require payments from parents to ‘top up’ the amount of pass-through from their service provider to match their hourly fees for hours outside of 20 Hours ECE.
The home-based educator top up payments can only be charged for the hours of 20 hours ECE.
Where a parent is the employer of an educator, the home-based educator top up payment still applies as a cost to the parent, but is not directly charged by the educator.
The home-based educator top up payments can only be charged for the hours of 20 Hours ECE.
Hospital-based ECE services
A service providing education and care to 3 or more children under the age of 6 who are also receiving health services within premises under the control of the Ministry of Health or a district health board.
Isolation index
A statistical index that rates a service’s relative isolation according to its distance in kilometers from services of three different population sizes.
K - O
Kindergarten
A teacher-led centre-based service controlled by a kindergarten association.
Kindergarten association
A service provider that controls one or more kindergartens formerly recognised under the Kindergarten Regulations 1959, or that has formed from a free kindergarten association or associations that controlled kindergartens recognised under these Regulations.
Kindergarten teachers, head teachers and senior teachers' collective agreement (KTCA)
The Kindergarten Teachers, Head Teachers and Senior Teachers' Collective Agreement (KTCA) is an agreement negotiated by members of the New Zealand Education Institute (NZEI) Te Riu Roa and the Secretary for Education.
Licence
A document issued by the Ministry of Education detailing the hours during which an early childhood education service may operate, and the maximum number of child-places the service may fill.
It is illegal to operate any premises as an early childhood education service without a licence.
Make-up day
A day that an enrolled child is not normally enrolled to attend but attends in place of an absent child.
Ministry regional office
The Ministry of Education office nearest to your service.
Mixed provision service
An early childhood education service that offers a mixture of both teacher-led and parent-led education and care sessions.
Notional roll
Funding on the basis of average actual attendance over a specified period.
Some services may be funded on notional rolls in recognition of the special function they serve in a community e.g. women’s refuge centres.
On duty: home-based education and care coordinators
For funding purposes, home-based education and care coordinators that are “on-duty” are:
- mainly focused on and involved in supervising quality environments for educators and children and
- able to instantly respond to educators and parents ‘person-to person’ (i.e. in person, by telephone or cell phone, or by pager).
On duty: parent/whānau-led services
For funding purposes, parents and whānau are “on duty” when they are working and involved with the children at the service.
Optional charge
A request for a payment that parents may choose whether or not to make. There must be no penalty for parents who choose not to make the payment. Once an agreement to pay has been reached then services may enforce payment.
Optional charges must apply for a specific purpose, which could be one-off or ongoing.
Other teacher
A teacher at a teacher-led centre-based service who does not hold a practising certificate issued by the Teaching Council of Aotearoa, New Zealand (Teaching Council) or does not hold a Teaching Council-approved ECE qualification or New Zealand qualified primary teacher qualification.
P - R
Parent/whānau-led services
A category of early childhood services that:
- requires of parent and/or whānau involvement in providing education and care for children
- does not have to meet the teacher certification criteria
- includes licensed playcentres and licensed kōhanga reo
- excludes teacher-led services.
Parity salary scale
The salary steps required to be attested to in order for a service to receive the parity funding rates.
Pay parity funding rates
A higher set of funding rates available to education and care services and hospital-based services who pay all employed certificated teachers according to the salary scales described Appendix 4. This includes Parity, Extended and Full parity funding rates.
Permanent enrolment
Enrolments that are:
- within the service’s licensed maximum number of child places and
- where the child is entitled to attend for the enrolled hours on a regular, ongoing basis.
The attendance of a permanently enrolled child does not depend on the absence of any other enrolled child.
Playcentres
Early childhood education services that belong to an association affiliated Te Whānau Tupu Ngātahi o Aotearoa - Playcentre Aotearoa.
A primary characteristic of playcentres is that families manage and implement the education programme.
Plus 10 ECE hours
Plus 10 ECE hours are the ECE Funding Subsidy funded hours available per child once that child has used all of their 20 Hours ECE hours.
They are the difference between 30 hours of funding less the 20 Hours ECE Hours, and can be claimed up to six hours per day per child.
Practising certificate
A certificate issued by the Teaching Council of Aotearoa, New Zealand. Holders of a current practising certificate are legally able to teach in New Zealand.
Private service
A service that is not community-based. It may be owned by a private company, publicly listed company, private trust, partnership, or an individual.
Private services are able to make financial gains and distribute these to their members.
Public holidays
New Zealand statutory holidays, e.g. Christmas Day, Labour Day, Waitangi Day, and each region’s Anniversary Day.
The Ministry does not fund public holidays in advance.
Quality funding rates
Higher funding rates for home-based ECE services or parent/whānau-led services that choose to meet additional criteria above what is required in the Education (Early Childhood Services) Regulations 2008.
Record keeping audit
An alternative name for a funding claim audit.
Registered teacher
A holder of a Teaching Council approved teaching qualification who has been registered by the Teaching Council. Note: A teacher must hold a current practising certificate to be able to teach.
A certificated teacher must hold an early childhood education teaching or New Zealand qualified primary teacher qualification.
Regulated (ratio) staff
Staff required for your service to meet the minimum regulatory requirements for staff:child ratios.
The requirements are set out in Regulation 44 and the Second Schedule of the Education (Early Childhood Services) Regulations 2008.
Education (Early Childhood Services) Regulations 2008 – New Zealand Legislation
Regulated (ratio) staff hours
The total number of hours worked by all regulated (ratio) staff in a service on each day.
This measure is used for teacher-led centre-based services only.
Regulations
The Regulations including:
- the Education (Early Childhood Services) Regulations 2008 – New Zealand Legislation
- the Education (Early Childhood Centres) Regulations 1998 – New Zealand Legislation and
- the 1992 Home-Based Care Order – New Zealand Legislation.
RS2 form
The RS2 change of bank account form.
The Ministry must be informed of changes to a service (or service provider) bank account using this form.
RS3 form
The RS3 initial application for funding for an early childhood service.
New services must complete this form to receive their first funding payment.
RS7 return
The RS7 early childhood funding return.
All early childhood education services (or the administrators of service provider) must complete an RS7 Return in order to receive a funding payment.
S - Z
Salary scale
The salary scale defines the minimum salary levels for a certificated teacher employed at an education and care service or hospital-based service.
Full salary scale – defines the salary steps required to be attested to in order for a service to receive parity funding rates.
Service provider
The service provider is the body, or agency that, or person who operates the early childhood education service. Where a service is part of an association or larger group of services, funding is paid to the service provider.
Sessional service
A service where no child attends for more than 4 hours in total on any 1 day.
Special purpose financial report
A type of financial report. A special purpose financial report includes:
- a statement of accounting policies
- details of the amount of funding received from the Ministry of Education
- information on how the funding has been spent.
Staff hour count
The method of tracking Certificated and Other Teacher Hours required by the Ministry for funding purposes.
This is a requirement for teacher-led centre-based services and all-day kindergartens only.
Standard funding rates
The minimum funding level for home-based care networks and parent/whānau-led services. Services that meet the requirements of the Education (Early Childhood Services) Regulations 2008 or the Home-Based Care Order (1992 and 1998 Amendment) are eligible for this rate.
Education (Early Childhood Services) Regulations 2008 – New Zealand Legislation
Home-Based Care Order – New Zealand Legislation
Substitute days and hours
A day or hours for which your service is not usually licensed to operate, but for which special permission has been obtained from a Ministry local office to open, in place of opening on a licensed day.
Tagged funding
Funding that must be used to cover particular expenses or to meet particular objectives e.g. equity funding.
Targeted funding for disadvantage
Targeted Funding for Disadvantage (Targeted Funding) is a specific funding mechanism for ECE services and ngā kōhanga reo to assist children considered to be from disadvantaged backgrounds. Targeted Funding is available to licensed, early learning services that meet specific eligibility criteria.
Targeted Funding is paid to eligible early learning services in addition to the ECE Funding subsidy, 20 Hours ECE and Equity Funding.
Targeted hours
Targeted Hours are the estimated number of Funded Child Hours attended by children considered to be from disadvantaged backgrounds.
Targeted Hours are used to calculate services’ funding entitlement for Targeted Funding for Disadvantage.
Te kōhanga reo
Te kōhanga reo is a total immersion te reo Māori whānau programme for mokopuna funded as ECE until age 6.
Teacher-led services
A category of early childhood education services where one or more qualified teachers are responsible for the overall programme in the service. They are required to have a person responsible (or home-based care coordinator) who is a qualified, certificated, teacher.
In teacher-led education and care centres and kindergartens, the person responsible may be primary or ECE qualified. In hospital-based and home-based services, only ECE qualified teachers can be a person responsible.
For funding purposes, teacher-led services include:
- education and care services
- kindergartens
- hospital-based services
- home-based care services
- services that are recognised by the Ministry as meeting the requirements for teacher-led funding rates.
Teaching Council of Aotearoa New Zealand
A crown entity established under the Education Act (1989) and is continued under the Education and Training Act 2020. Its functions include:
- determining standards for teacher registration and the issuing of practising certificates
- establishing and maintaining the qualifications that lead to teacher registration.
Teaching Council of Aotearoa New Zealand standards | Ngā Paerewa
The Standards for the Teaching Profession determined by the Teaching Council of Aotearoa New Zealand that provide a holistic description of what high quality teaching practice looks like and what it means to be a teacher in Aotearoa New Zealand.
Resources on what the Standards | Ngā Paerewa look like can be found on the Teaching Council of Aotearoa New Zealand website.
Our Code our standards – Teaching Council of Aotearoa New Zealand
Transitional school visits
One or more visits by a child under the age of 6, who is not enrolled in school, to a primary school as part of a ‘transition’ period between early childhood education and primary school.
Wash-up funding
The proportion of a service’s actual entitlement that is paid on the basis of actual funded child hours for the previous 4-month period.
Wash-up funding is funding that makes up the difference between the advance payment made in the previous funding payment and a service’s actual funding entitlement for the previous 4-month period.
Wash-up funding may be a positive (e.g. $2,000.00) or negative (e.g. -$2,000.00) amount. If it is negative, the Ministry deducts the amount from future payments.
Education Workforce (former TeachNZ)
A unit of the Ministry of Education. One of the functions of Education Workforce is to assist with inquiries from members of the public who are interested in gaining teaching qualifications.
You can contact TeachNZ on 0800 832 246 or visit their website.