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Real World Ready  ·  Layer 1: Authentic Experience

Learn at New Zealand Parliament

A Real World Protocol  ·  Field-Based STEM  ·  Parliamentary Education Service  ·  Years 1–13  ·  Civics and Citizenship
Parliament is where New Zealand's democracy is practiced in real time. The laws that shape everyday life are debated and passed here. Select committees hear submissions from citizens. The House sits, votes, and holds the government to account. A student who has stood in the Debating Chamber, watched Question Time from the public gallery, or sat in a select committee room arrives back at the classroom with an understanding of democracy that no textbook can replicate. The Parliamentary Education Service offers structured programmes for every year level. This protocol shows how to make a Parliament visit a Real World Ready Layer 1 experience and extend it with AI as a thinking partner.
Before the visit
At Parliament
Back in the classroom
AI as thinking partner
What to do
1
Before the visit

Ask students one question: what decisions does Parliament make that affect your life? Record their answers. These predictions become the evidence students test when they return.

2
Book your programme

Choose from How Parliament Works, Debating Roleplay, or the Karaehe Kaewa virtual visit. All programmes are designed and led by Parliamentary educators. See column three for the full programme list.

3
At Parliament

Students observe the spaces, the procedures, and the people. Use the observation prompts in column two. Notes, sketches, and voice recordings on a mobile phone are all useful ways to capture what students notice.

4
Back in the classroom

Return to the predictions students made before the visit. What was confirmed? What surprised them? What questions do they now have that they didn't have before?

5
The closing question

Democracy is not just a system. It is a set of choices people make every day. What did you see at Parliament that showed you democracy in action — and what did it require of the people inside?

What to notice at Parliament
  • The Debating Chamber The layout of the chamber is designed to make disagreement visible. Note the seating arrangement, the Speaker's chair, the Mace, and how MPs face each other. Ask students: why is it built this way?
  • A select committee room Smaller and less formal than the Chamber. This is where citizens can speak directly to the people who make laws. Ask students: who has the right to come here and be heard?
  • The Theatrette The press conference room is where Parliament communicates with the public. Ask students: why does a democracy need a space like this?
  • The Parliamentary Library Parliament's own research resource — available to every MP, regardless of party. Ask students: why do lawmakers need independent information?
  • The people MPs, staff, security, visitors, and journalists. Democracy is not a building. It is a system that requires people to keep it functioning. Ask students: what role does each person here play?
Education programmes
How Parliament Works  ·  Years 1–13 Guided tour across the Parliament precinct, visiting the Debating Chamber, a select committee room, and other spaces. Programmes available for primary, intermediate, secondary, and ESOL groups.
Debating Roleplay  ·  Years 5–13 Students experience the process of parliamentary debate inside the actual Chamber or a committee room. A structured role-play that makes the process of lawmaking tangible.
Karaehe Kaewa: Virtual Visit  ·  All year levels An educator-led virtual visit for schools that cannot travel to Wellington. Students explore the Debating Chamber, select committee room, Theatrette, and Parliamentary Library without leaving their classroom. Available nationwide.
Online modules  ·  Self-paced The Debating Chamber, Select Committees and the Role of the Media, and Introduction to Parliament — available in English and te reo Māori at no cost.
Book all programmes through the Parliamentary Education Service: parliament.nz/learn or contact [email protected] · 04 817 9565. In 2026, programmes that involve watching the House in session are not bookable after 24 September while the post-election sitting calendar is confirmed.
Health and safety: As with any activity outside the classroom, please ensure your school's own EOTC requirements and health and safety procedures are followed. Photography inside the Chamber and some other spaces may be restricted — check with your Parliamentary educator when booking.

Back in the classroom: AI as thinking partner (Real World Ready Layer 2)

Years 1–6
What does Parliament do?Ask AI: "What is Parliament and what does it do?" Then compare AI's answer with one thing you saw or heard at Parliament today. Does AI's answer match what you experienced?
How is a law made?Ask AI: "How does an idea become a law in New Zealand?" Then ask: where in the process does Parliament fit? Can you name one step you saw evidence of at Parliament?
Who gets to decide?Ask AI: "Who decides what Parliament discusses?" Then ask your students: whose voices did you see or hear at Parliament, and whose voices were absent?
Years 7–10
Select committeesAsk AI: "What is the role of a select committee in New Zealand's Parliament?" Then ask: what did being in a committee room add to that explanation? What does AI leave out?
How MMP worksAsk AI: "How does New Zealand's MMP electoral system affect the makeup of Parliament?" Apply this to the Parliament you visited: which parties were represented, and how does the seating arrangement reflect MMP?
Citizens and ParliamentAsk AI: "How can an ordinary citizen influence New Zealand law?" Compare AI's answer with the select committee process you observed. What did AI describe that you saw evidence of — and what did it miss?
Years 11–13
Constitutional arrangementsAsk AI: "What is New Zealand's constitutional arrangement, and what makes it unusual compared to other democracies?" Evaluate AI's account against what you observed at Parliament. Where does the absence of a written constitution become visible in the building and its procedures?
The Treaty and ParliamentAsk AI: "What is the relationship between the Treaty of Waitangi and the New Zealand Parliament?" Identify where that relationship is visible — or invisible — in the spaces you visited and the programme you attended.
Parliamentary sovereigntyAsk AI to explain parliamentary sovereignty and identify its limits in the New Zealand system. Compare AI's account with what you observed: where does the power of Parliament appear absolute, and where are its constraints visible?
Experience Trace Scale — Parliamentary Education Service
Level Years 1–6 Years 7–10 Years 11–13
1 I can describe one thing I saw at Parliament that showed me democracy is real, not just a word in a book. I can describe the key spaces I visited and explain what each one does in the process of lawmaking. I can characterise New Zealand's parliamentary system from direct observation and explain how its structure reflects its constitutional arrangements.
2 I can say one decision Parliament makes that affects my life and explain how I know that from what I saw. I can explain how the layout and procedures of Parliament reflect democratic principles and identify where I saw those principles in action. I can connect the physical design of Parliament — the Chamber, the committee rooms, the library — to the constitutional principles each space is designed to serve.
3 I can say one thing AI told me about Parliament and whether it matched what I actually saw. I can identify where AI's account of Parliament's processes matched what I observed and where it generalised or missed what direct experience revealed. I can critically evaluate AI's account of New Zealand's constitutional and democratic arrangements against my own observations, identifying points of accuracy, omission, and oversimplification.
4 I can explain one thing about Parliament that I could only understand by being there — not by reading or watching a video. I can explain what being inside Parliament added to my understanding of democracy that a description or image could not have provided. I can articulate what the physical and procedural experience of Parliament contributes to civic understanding that secondary sources — including AI — cannot replicate.
5 I can say one question I have now about how New Zealand's democracy works that I didn't have before I visited. I can identify one aspect of New Zealand's democratic system that I want to investigate further, and explain what my visit showed me that made that question worth asking. I can propose a civic or constitutional question arising from my visit, identify appropriate sources and investigative methods, and explain what a well-evidenced answer would contribute to understanding New Zealand's democratic system.