Home Schooling NZ
Supporting Families

throughout NZ

for more than 25 years.

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Qualification

Did you know that there is an alternative to NCEA?

For more than 10 years ACE graduates have been gaining entry to universities and tertiary institutions throughout New Zealand.

A letter from the New Zealand Vice-Chancellor's Committee states,

"This is to certify that the Year 13 Certificate of the Accelerated Christian Education (ACE) is accepted by the New Zealand universities for admission ad eundem statum at entrance level."

You can now provide your children with a quality Christian based curriculum that is nationally and internationally recognized for it's academic excellence.

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Certificates & Qualification

The New Zealand ACE Academic Certificates
provide students with an officially recognized tertiary entrance qualification.

 

These qualifications have enable hundred of ACE graduate to gain access to tertiary institution throughout New Zealand and the world.

 

ACE students  have gone on to successfully complete courses of study in every academic and vocational discipline.

 

The New Zealand ACE Academic Council awards five ACE Certificates:

  • Certificate of Achievement

  • Certificate of Academic Achievement New Zealand Year 11

  • Certificate of Academic Achievement New Zealand Year 12

  • Certificate of Academic Achievement New Zealand Year 13

  • Certificate of Academic Achievement New Zealand Year 13 With Honours

The following are extracts from letters received from the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors' Committee

 

"The Vice-Chancellor’s Committee advises that a student with a Year 12 Certificate is eligible to be considered for discretionary entrance by a New Zealand university."     

 

"This is to certify that the Year 13 Certificate of the Accelerated Christian Education (ACE) is accepted by the New Zealand universities for admission ad eundem statum at entrance level. This means that for the purpose of entrance to a university the qualification is deemed to be equivalent to the officially-established common entrance standard in this country."  Vice-Chancellors' Committee (December 2005)