Our Staff                                  News Letter                               Kura Location                             Photo Gallery
 Back                            Maori                                         History                                     Prospectus                                   Contact us

   

 

TE AHO MATUA

 

Te Ira Tangata

The whänau practises a holistic approach to children’s development based on Mäori cultural and spiritual values and beliefs.

The whänau:

·        has clearly-stated goals that reflect these priorities;

·        implements programmes that reflect this approach;

·        provides a cooperative learning environment that nurtures and protects;

·        encourages children to pursue healthy habits and attitudes.

The whänau honours all people and respects the uniqueness of the individual.

The whänau:

·        models the values of love, tolerance, and care for others;

·        organises learning experiences that encourage the values of love, tolerance, and care;

·        has systems to identify and discourage physical or psychological harm against oneself and others.

 

TE REO

The whänau ensures the language of the kura will be, for the most part, exclusively Mäori.

The whänau:

·        develops strategies that effect a total commitment to the everyday usage of Te Reo Mäori;

·        accommodates those who are still in the learning phase.

The whänau achieves full competency in Mäori and English.

The whänau:

·        develops, implements, and evaluates programmes to support full competency in Mäori and English;

·        develops programmes for language usage and competency in all teaching and learning experiences;

·        teaches Mäori and English as discrete and separate.

The whänau respects all languages.

The whänau:

·        is able to demonstrate how this respect is shown.

 

Ngä Iwi

The whänau nurtures children to be secure in the knowledge of themselves and their own people.

The whänau:

·        provides programmes which emphasise the child’s being through genealogy and iwi knowledge;

·        provides programmes whereby the historical, cultural, political, social, religious, and economic issues and events which are part of Mäori heritage are studied.

The whänau ensures that children acknowledge and learn about others and their societies.

The whänau:

·        develops, implements and evaluates programmes that meet this requirement.

The whänau ensures all members play an integral part in children’s learning and in the learning of the wider whänau.

The whänau:

·        emphasises that through association with the whänau appropriate and acceptable behaviour will be modelled and reinforced;

·        emphasises the whänau responsibility for establishing and reinforcing a caring, supportive environment;

·        affirms that the kura is available for the learning activities of all the whänau members.

The whänau affirms collective ownership and responsibility for the kura.

The whänau:

·        values the participation of all members in various administration and ancillary roles.

·        ensures that a strong link between individual families and the operation of the kura and its programmes is maintained.

 

Te Ao

The whänau ensures that children will be secure in their knowledge about the Mäori world and enable them to participate in the wider world.

The whänau:

·        develops, implements, and evaluates programmes that reflects this approach.

The whänau ensures that children will explore the physical and natural world while maintaining their link to ancestral knowledge.

The whänau:

·        develops, implements, and evaluates programmes that reflects this approach;

·        develops in children an understanding of practices that are environmentally friendly;

·        offers programmes which develops in children a knowledge of their role as kaitiaki.

 

Ähuatanga Ako

The whänau operates a warm, loving and intellectually stimulating learning environment.

The whänau:

·        ensures the learning of knowledge, skills and attitudes to include the use of body, mind, spirit and all the senses;

·        implements the regular practices of karakia, waiata, wananga and involves whänau, kuia, koroua and pukenga to reinforce its philosophies, values and curriculum content;

·        provides for the special interests and abilities of individual children;

·        encourages shared and co-operative ways of learning;

·        welcomes innovative ways of stimulating children’s learning and encouraging self-motivation;

·        provides opportunities for development of self-directed learning.

The whänau ensures that the importance of the learning environment will be emphasised.

The whänau:

·        honours kaumatua as repositories of Mäori knowledge and invites their participation as advisers and fellow teachers;

·        expands the learning environment to include marae, the local and wider natural environment, libraries, museums, and other places that contribute to learning;

·        values the presence of supportive adults as important participants in the teaching and learning process;

·        accepts that all members of the whänau have a joint responsibility for teaching and learning and that older children care for and guide younger ones in learning activities;

·        exposes children to the protocols of hospitality in the home, school, and marae.

The whänau includes strong education leadership and capable teachers.

The whänau:

·        appoints suitably qualified personnel;

·        manages their performance effectively;

·        provides personnel with constructive feedback that will enable them to participate at the highest level of performance.

 

Ngä Tino Uaratanga

The whänau ensures that each child’s abilities are successfully nurtured including their academic skills, bilingualism, natural talents, creativity, enthusiasm for learning and life, ability to retain knowledge, leadership qualities, independence, joy, spirituality balanced with physical pursuits, their links to ancestral domains and their pride of place within their iwi.

The whänau achieves this by:

·        identifying and using opportunities for children, teachers and parents to be involved in the setting of goals and assessing children’s progress against them;

·        the development of appropriate measures for assessing and analysing the achievement of children;

·        the linking of the planning, assessment and evaluation programme to Te Aho Matua;

·        operating a system of self review and evaluation;

·        having long-term aspirations for the children who graduate from the kura.