Karamu High School
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Karamu High School | |
- | |
Motto | Knowledge is strength |
Type | Co-ed state secondary (Year 9-13) |
Year established | ? |
Address | Windsor Avenue, Hastings, New Zealand |
Principal | Mike Purcell |
School roll | 714 |
Socio-economic decile (10 is high) | 3 |
Ministry of Education Institution no. | 223 |
Website | www.karamu.school.nz |
Karamu High School is a co-educational state high school in Hastings, New Zealand for students in Years 9 to 13. The school also operates the Akina Activity Centre as an attached unit.
The school is the main co-ed secondary school within Hastings City itself and is generally regarded by residents as less conservative than its local state single-sex counterparts.
The school’s campus is located to the easternmost end of Hastings City, adjacent to Windsor Park to the west and the Heretaunga Plains’ orchards to the east.
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[edit] Uniform
The school’s colours of green, white and red are reflected in the school’s uniform:
Girls – Tartan skirt, white blouse and green jersey/green blazer, black shoes.
Boys – Black trousers (winter), grey shorts (summer), white shirt, green jersey/green blazer, black shoes.
Uniform is optional for students in Year 13 and consequently students in this level almost without exception wear mufti.
[edit] School life
Perhaps owing to its more liberal outlook, the school has a strong focus on cultural pursuits. It maintains a good reputation in dance and music competitions and provides a wide range of opportunities to students to this end. There is also wide participation in extra-curricular sporting activities and school provides opportunities in over 20 sports with varying levels of success.
Karamu’s student body is subdivided in four houses – Red, Blue, Yellow and Green – which have also been known in some years to be named after native trees (like the school itself). The school stages a range of full-school events such as swimming sports, cross-country running and a drama competition in which houses compete against each other. The school does not operate a prefect system, however, does appoint a head girl and boy plus a deputy to each. These have no formal power but provide symbolic leadership to the student body, for example by heading the student council.
The high school’s yearbook, ‘Tira Ora,’ is named after a branch of the karamu tree used in Māori ceremonies and produced by the school’s Media Studies students along with the school newspaper, ‘The Enthusiast’. The high school also produces an annual prospectus primarily aimed at the body of fee-paying international students which attend the school.
The tira ora also forms the logo of the school itself, appearing in the school badge and on official correspondence.
[edit] Akina Activity Centre
An attached unit to Karamu High School, Akina Activity Centre has a roll of up to 20 students with behavioural problems, many of whom have been excluded from other high schools but remain too young to leave the educational system. For this reason, learning is undertaken using less conventional means than in the school proper. It is also noteworthy that while Karamu itself is a decile 3 school, Akina is a decile 1.
[edit] 1993-4 Hastings ERO crisis
Mounting pressure primarily from residents of Flaxmere for a high school in the suburb resulted in an announcement from the Ministry of Education of a full review of secondary schooling provision in the area by the ERO. Until this time, students living in Flaxmere were forced to travel some distance to one of Hastings’ single-sex schools or to Karamu High School, which was even further away still.
However, as it was widely accepted that the population of Hastings could not support an additional high school, there was an assumption that one of the existing secondary schools – Hastings Girls’ High, Hastings Boys’ High or Karamu - would need to close, with a (less likely) possible merger of the remaining two. This prompted an expensive and at times acrimonious PR war between the three schools (which spawned Hastings Girls’ High’s infamous ‘Girls do better in girls’ schools’ advertising campaign.) Karamu High School, however, conspicuously spent no money on advertising through this period, instead using newspaper editorial to state the school’s money was being used for educational purposes only.
Eventually, tensions between the schools (and their respective supporters) turned out to be for naught as Flaxmere College opened and all incumbent schools also remained open.
[edit] Alumni
Paul Holmes - journalist, TV presenter
Jason Reeves – radio and TV presenter