Outdoor education — using natural environments for structured learning and development — encompasses school camping programmes, adventure sports education, environmental education, and experiential learning. New Zealand's extraordinary natural environment makes outdoor education particularly accessible and valued. This guide covers the key funding sources for outdoor education in New Zealand.
New Zealand outdoor education sits at the intersection of:
- Education: School curriculum enrichment and student wellbeing
- Sport and recreation: Adventure sports development
- Conservation: Environmental education in DOC-managed areas
- Mental health and wellbeing: Nature-based wellbeing programmes
- Youth development: Leadership, resilience, and character development
This cross-sector framing opens multiple funding pathways.
Ministry of Education is the primary funder for school outdoor education in New Zealand:
- School camps are often funded through school capitation budgets
- Equity funding: Schools with higher needs receive additional equity funding that can support outdoor education
- Ka Hikitia: Māori education strategy — outdoor education connecting to tūrangawaewae and land
- Special grants: Some targeted MOE funding for specific outdoor education initiatives
Sport NZ funds outdoor recreation and adventure sport:
- RSTs fund community outdoor education providers with broad participation outcomes
- Sport NZ investment in outdoor recreation organisations through national bodies
- Active families and active communities investment that includes outdoor education components
DOC manages 30% of New Zealand's land. DOC connections:
- Outdoor education on conservation estate: Requires permits and partnerships
- Environmental education: DOC partnerships for conservation-connected outdoor education
- Youth ranger and volunteer programmes: Some co-investment with outdoor education providers
DOC is primarily a permission and partnership agency for outdoor education — formal grants from DOC are limited.
RSTs fund community outdoor education:
- Club and organisation development grants
- Equipment grants (camping, climbing, kayaking gear)
- Programme grants for community outdoor education
RSTs vary significantly — check with your local RST for appetite.
New Zealand gaming trusts fund community outdoor education:
- Four Winds Foundation
- Grassroots Trust
- Pub Charity
- Lion Foundation
- Southern Trust
Gaming trusts fund:
- Equipment for outdoor education programmes
- Programme delivery for community groups
- Youth development through outdoor education
Lottery Community and Lottery Sport both fund outdoor education:
- Community outdoor education programmes
- Equipment and facility grants for outdoor education providers
Outdoor education's mental health outcomes are increasingly well-evidenced:
- Mental Health Foundation NZ: Nature-based wellbeing
- Health NZ: Youth wellbeing programmes
- Community trusts: Wellbeing through outdoor experience
Nature-deficit disorder and the evidence for green and blue space on mental health make outdoor education a health funder priority.
Outdoor education's character development outcomes:
- Community foundations: Youth development programmes
- Rotary and Lions: Youth development grants
- Duke of Edinburgh Award: Adventure journeys and expeditions (formally structured)
- Scouts NZ: Adventure-based youth development (embedded in organisation)
Outdoor education with conservation content:
- DOC: Conservation education partnerships
- Regional councils: Environmental education
- Conservation foundations: Connecting young people with New Zealand's natural heritage
- Predator Free NZ Trust: Conservation-connected education
Outdoor education connecting to Māori relationship with land (kaitiakitanga, tūrangawaewae):
- Te Puni Kōkiri: Māori outdoor programmes
- Iwi and hapū funding: Land-based cultural education
- Sport NZ Māori: Māori participation in outdoor recreation
Strong outdoor education applications demonstrate:
- Target participants: Who benefits? School groups, at-risk youth, disability, disadvantaged communities
- Learning outcomes: What do participants gain — resilience, environmental connection, teamwork?
- Safety standards: Appropriate qualifications, risk management, instructor ratios (NZOIA qualifications)
- Environmental responsibility: Conservation values, minimal impact on land
- Māori engagement: Cultural protocol, tūrangawaewae connections
- Cost access: Affordable and subsidised for lower-income participants
- DOC and landowner relationships: Appropriate permissions for land use
Tahua's grants management platform helps outdoor education organisations manage grant applications, track equipment and programme funding, and demonstrate the wellbeing and learning outcomes that funders value.