This Profile Report was written within six months of the Education Review Office and Te One School working in Te Ara Huarau , an improvement evaluation approach used in most English Medium State and State Integrated Schools. For more information about Te Ara Huarau see ERO’s website. www.ero.govt.nz
Te One School is located near Waitangi township on Rēkohu / Wharekauri / Chatham Island and provides education for learners from Years 1 to 8 . Its local curriculum utilises the school’s location, including natural environment based learning activities .
Te One School’s strategic priorities for improving outcomes for learners are to ensure that:
You can find a copy of the school’s strategic and annual plan on Te One School’s website.
ERO and the school are working together to evaluate the impact of a localised writing curriculum on the progress of all learners and in particular target learners.
The rationale for selecting this evaluation is:
The school expects to see:
The school can draw from the following strengths to support its goal to evaluate the impact of a localised writing curriculum on the progress of all learners and in particular target learners:
Moving forward, the school will prioritise:
ERO’s role will be to support the school in its evaluation for improvement cycle to improve outcomes for all learners. ERO will support the school in reporting their progress to the community. The next public report on ERO’s website will be a Te Ara Huarau | School Evaluation Report and is due within three years.
Shelley Booysen
Director of Schools
12 October 2023
The Education Counts website provides further information about the school’s student population, student engagement and student achievement. educationcounts.govt.nz/home
As of June 2023, the Te One School Board has attested to the following regulatory and legislative requirements:
For further information please contact Te One School, School Board.
The next School Board assurance that it is meeting regulatory and legislative requirements will be reported, along with the Te Ara Huarau | School Evaluation Report, within three years.
Information on ERO’s role and process in this review can be found on the Education Review Office website.
Shelley Booysen
Director of Schools
12 October 2023
The Education Counts website provides further information about the school’s student population, student engagement and student achievement. educationcounts.govt.nz/home
On the basis of the findings of this review, ERO ‘s overall evaluation judgement of Te One’s performance in achieving valued outcomes for its students is: Developing.
Te One School is located on the Chatham Islands. It caters for students in Years 1 to 8. At the time of this ERO review, the roll was 45 students, 30 identify as Māori and seven as Moriori.
The December 2016 ERO report identified areas for strengthening practice and recommended that the Ministry of Education (MoE) provide support to bring about improvements. Since that time, a MoE advisor and Resource Teachers of Learning and Behaviour (RTLB) have worked with the school. A Student Achievement Function (SAF) practitioner was appointed to work with the school in March 2020.
Trustees have received training from the New Zealand School Trustees Association (NZSTA). In 2018 a Limited Statutory Manager (LSM) was appointed to be responsible for employment and curriculum functions. The LSM is no longer required but is available to the school in an advisory position.
There have been significant staffing changes since the last ERO review. A new principal was appointed in term 3 2019 and two new teachers joined in 2020.
A range of professional learning and development has occurred to support curriculum development for better learner outcomes.
Community links are evident through developing relationships with local iwi and imi, community consultation, and regular interactions with the local early learning service and schools.
The principal works collaboratively with the other local principals to provide professional learning and development opportunities for teachers. This provision is also used to enhance learning-centred relationships with iwi/imi and the wider Chatham Islands community.
The 2016 ERO report identified key areas for ongoing development. These were for trustees, the principal and staff to:
The school has made significant progress in addressing some priorities identified for review and development.
Student achievement has improved since the last ERO review. At the end of 2019 most students, including Māori, were achieving at or above curriculum level expectations in reading, and the large majority of students achieved successfully in writing and mathematics. Moriori children achieve slightly better than their peers.
Achievement for groups of students is well known by trustees, leaders and teachers. An appropriate range of systems, processes and strategies is used to identify, track and monitor the individual needs of students at risk of not achieving at expected curriculum levels. However, the schoolwide picture of accelerated progress for individuals and groups of students not meeting expectations is not sufficiently clear. Refining school targets to specifically focus on accelerating the rates of progress of learners at risk of underachievement is needed.
There is a well-considered approach to improving learning and wellbeing outcomes for all children. Students engage in caring, collaborative and inclusive learning environments. Learner participation is promoted through well-known values and expectations. Respectful and positive relationships are highly evident. This promotes a sense of belonging and connection to the school.
Staff have acknowledged the need to develop a responsive localised curriculum that reflects the diverse learners across the school. The principal has sought the expertise of an external agency to support this process. Ongoing curriculum developments identified by the school to better promote positive student outcomes include:
A well-considered focus on developing greater levels of involvement and relational trust across the school community is evident. Families, whānau and the community are welcomed and involved in school activities as respected and valued contributors to learning.
The school continues to develop its capability to sustain and improve its performance.
Following a period of significant leadership and staffing changes, the new principal has prioritised establishing and strengthening key organisational and learning conditions. Most developments are at an earlier stage of establishment or implementation. These will need to be embedded, consolidated and sustained over time. A range of professional learning and development opportunities support this focus. This should better promote successful learning and wellbeing outcomes aligned to school priorities.
Board members actively represent and serve the school in its stewardship role. Trustees receive useful information from the principal. Regular training and support from the New Zealand School Trustees Association for board members promotes shared understanding of the trustee role and responsibilities. Good systems and governance guidelines are in place for meeting statutory requirements.
Trustees and leaders have undertaken strategic community consultation to inform decision making and review and develop the school charter. Purposeful engagement with local iwi and imi supports an increased acknowledgement of identity, language and culture for Māori and Moriori students and their families. Trustees and the principal acknowledge this is an area for ongoing development.
A shared understanding of internal evaluation across all levels of the school is required. This should support trustees and staff to better determine the effectiveness of teaching practices, learning interventions, and school operations on raising achievement and improving outcomes for all students.
The principal and teachers now need to focus on the:
Before the review, the board of trustees and principal of the school completed the ERO Board Assurance Statement and Self-Audit Checklists. In these documents they attested that they had taken all reasonable steps to meet their legislative obligations related to:
During the review, ERO checked the following items because they have a potentially high impact on student achievement:
ERO identified non-compliance in relation to:
In order to address this, the board of trustees must:
Since the onsite stage of the review the board and principal have actively engaged to address this.
Trustees and the principal have requested the continued support of ERO for the next one to two years. ERO agrees with the need for ongoing involvement.
The school acknowledges the effective support provided by the MoE. Additionally, ERO recommends that the school continues to seek assistance from the MoE in order to support curriculum development and implementation, and to sustain and continue to improve student learning and achievement.
On the basis of the findings of this review, ERO ‘s overall evaluation judgement of Te One’s performance in achieving valued outcomes for its students is: Developing.
Dr Lesley Patterson
Director Review and Improvement Services (Southern)
Southern Region - Te Tai Tini
Te One School is the largest of three schools on the Chatham Islands. It is situated in Te One and near Waitangi, the main population base of Rekohu/Wharekauri, the largest island. The school has a roll of 63 children, more than half of whom are Māori. The board generously funds the school so that there are three fulltime teachers as well as the principal. Two of the four parent trustees are new to the board. The other two, one of whom is the chairperson, have been on the board for around two years.
Although the school is remote, teachers have participated in a wide range of professional development opportunities through a mixture of off-island courses, on-line work, and visiting providers.
The school has continued to have many changes of staff since the last review.
The vision and valued outcomes defined by the school for all children are to embrace the unique Chatham Islands way of life, and educate their children in a safe, caring and positive environment. Through the vision the board seeks to enable their students to become confident, respectful individuals who are able to successfully contribute to their ongoing journey. The school's values are responsibility, honesty, cooperation, respect, and working toward 'Personal Best' by aiming high.
The school’s achievement information shows that over the past four years about 40% of children are working below or well below the National Standards in reading, writing and mathematics. Around two thirds of girls are achieving at or above the standard. Māori children and boys are not achieving well. In 2015, 45% of Māori and half of the boys were reading at levels below national expectations.
Teachers need to work as a team to moderate children's achievements and form overall teacher judgements. The only moderation is between the principal and an individual teacher. The planned moderation process for writing did not occur. There is no moderation with the other Chatham Island schools.
Since the 2013 ERO review, the school has provided a range of professional development opportunities for teachers, and had a focus on student behaviour. The student behaviour plan has been rewritten, and teachers have made a start, with the help of the Resource Teacher - Learning and Behaviour to implement aspects of the Positive Behaviour for Learning programme. Some work has been undertaken to evaluate and revise curriculum plans with mathematics, English and science being the most recent reviews.
The school is not yet responding effectively to children whose learning and achievement need to be accelerated.
The school uses a good range of assessments to identify children at risk of not achieving equitable outcomes. However, it is not using this information to plan and implement programmes to accelerate all of these children.
Some children are targeted for extra small group or individual support outside of the classroom. However there has been no formal evaluation of how well these programmes are accelerating children's progress.
The school's curriculum, processes and practices go some way to enact its vision, goals and targets. However the targets are not sufficiently aspirational for the board to be assured that all children are getting the support they need to be their best.
The parent trustees need training so that they are confident of their roles and responsibilities and better able to carry them out. Since the on-site stage of the review, a staff trustee has been elected to the board.
Trustees need to be more involved in setting the school's vision, goals and targets, and monitoring these to make sure that all students are making sufficient progress to meet the National Standards by the time they leave school. This is particularly important in meeting the charter goal of preparing children to attend boarding schools at the end of Year 8. Some children who are achieving at or close to the standard could be achieving at a higher level if there were higher expectations from the board and teachers, and in some cases, more effective targeted teaching.
The school's targets are not sufficiently challenging and focused on improvement. The 2016 targets are to raise the proportion of children in Years 3 to 8 at or above National Standards from 60% to 65%, 53% to 60%, and 43% to 50% in writing, reading and mathematics respectively. These targets do not meet the needs of many children who will still be below the standard. The school's current targets will not achieve the national expectation that 85% of children will be achieving at the National Standards by the end of Year 8.
The teachers as a team have some good strengths and skills. These could be better used to support teaching and learning across the school. There needs to be better alignment between the school's goals and targets and teachers' planning and delivery of the curriculum. Teachers need to be more involved in analysing achievement information so that they can use it to plan and address children's learning needs.
Two of the three fulltime teachers are recent graduates who have taught only, or mostly, at this school. They need to be better supported to provide learning opportunities for children that meet their needs while they are within the classroom programme.
The school makes effective use of community resources to provide relevant local learning experiences for children. For example, visitors to the island who have skills in particular fields are encouraged to talk with the children and share their skills with them.
The school's links with parents and the wider community have become less effective in the past year or two. Links with Māori parents and the marae are not as frequent or engaging as previously. The school has made an initial contact with both local iwi, but needs to be more proactive in strengthening these links to regain the strong support from the community that has been evident in the past. Following consultation with iwi and gaining the aspirations of the parent community, there needs to be an evaluation of the school’s te reo and tikanga Māori programme. Trustees and leaders need to ensure the programme meets and promotes the range of cultural skills, strengths and interests of students transitioning from the kōhanga reo and through the school.
The board needs to undertake regular anonymous surveys of students, parents and staff. ERO found concerns around the safety of staff and students that had not been dealt with in ways that have resolved the issues for those concerned.
The board needs to undertake a formal exit interview process to ascertain the reasons for teachers leaving so that it can effectively respond to any emerging trends and patterns.
Trustees need to put in place a plan for evaluation of the outcomes of teaching and learning. At this stage they have little information to assist them to confidently make resourcing decisions to support children at risk of not achieving good educational outcomes. A stronger focus on internal evaluation would assist them in allocating resources where the most gains can be made.
Leaders and teachers:
ERO intends to carry out a process of ongoing evaluation to support development over the course of one-to-two years.
Before the review the board of trustees and principal of the school completed the ERO board assurance statement and Self Audit Checklists. In these documents they attested that they had taken all reasonable steps to meet their legislative obligations related to the following:
During the review, ERO checked the following items because they have a potentially high impact on student safety and wellbeing:
ERO found several areas of non-compliance.
ERO recommends that the Secretary for Education considers intervention under Part 7A of the Education Act 1989 in order to bring about the following improvements:
ERO recommends that NZSTA provides training for the board in its roles and responsibilities, and to assist it with understanding its role in promoting high standards of student achievement.
Dr Lesley Patterson
Deputy Chief Review Officer Te Waipounamu/Southern