The New Zealand Herald

NZQA pulls school’s teaching rights

AWI latest to lose accreditat­ion as crackdowns continue on tertiary institutes over course quality concerns

- Andrew Laxon

Another school for internatio­nal students has lost permission to teach courses. NZQA has withdrawn AWI Internatio­nal Education Group’s accreditat­ion for New Zealand Diploma in Business (Leadership and Management) (Level 5) and Diploma in Informatio­n technology (Technical Support) (Level 5).

Deputy chief executive Quality Assurance Dr Grant Klinkum said NZQA monitoring had raised concerns over AWI’s Level 5 and Level 7 programmes.

He said 40 students were affected by the move. The Level 7 students would finish their course at AWI but the Level 5 students would transfer to Concordia Institute of Business, run by Aspire2 Internatio­nal.

NZQA had previously withdrawn AWI’s accreditat­ion for New Zealand Diploma in Business (Level 6) and the New Zealand Institute of Management (Level 5) in 2014.

The Queen St-based school, which has 200 students in total, has had a troubled history.

In May 2015 a student, Parmita Rani, was murdered by her estranged husband Mandeep Singh who stabbed her in the school foyer as she left an exam room.

In 2010 a student, Deepak Nagpal, who was enrolled in a business

The Queen St-based school, which has 200 students in total, has had a troubled history.

course at AWI but worked as a fruit packer in the Bay of Plenty, murdered his co-worker and landlady Ravneet Sangha and her 2-year-old daughter Anna in their Otumoetai home.

NZQA did not respond directly to Herald questions about student safety at AWI but referred to the Education (Pastoral Care of Internatio­nal Students) Code of Practice 2016, which makes education providers responsibl­e for student safety and well-being.

The Herald asked AWI for comment but had received no response by deadline.

The decision is the latest in a series of crackdowns by regulators on tertiary educationa­l institutio­ns.

Last month NZQA withdrew accreditat­ion for three business courses at the Internatio­nal College of New Zealand, saying 95 per cent of the students who passed should have been failed.

NZQA has also ordered Te Wananga o Aotearoa and New Zealand National College to stop taking students into some courses because of assessment concerns.

It deregister­ed Linguis Internatio­nal, which had about 1000 students at its peak, for “systemic plagiarism” and placed statutory conditions on one of New Zealand’s biggest schools for internatio­nal students, Cornell Institute of Business and Technology, saying there were doubts over whether many of its qualificat­ions were genuine.

Manukau Institute of Technology is under investigat­ion by the Tertiary Education Commission over alleged rule breaches at its commercial arm Enterprise­MIT, including claims that tutors completed students’ assignment­s. Enterprise­MIT was shut down at the end of last year after a highly critical draft report by the auditors.

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