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Rural Waikato school wins $50k of supplies in national contest

Author
Malisha Kumar,
Publish Date
Fri, 20 Dec 2024, 1:11pm

Rural Waikato school wins $50k of supplies in national contest

Author
Malisha Kumar,
Publish Date
Fri, 20 Dec 2024, 1:11pm

A small-town Waikato primary school has gone viral, racking up more than 20,000 views on social media, helping them win more than $50,000 worth of school supplies.

Mangakino School has been named the winner of Noel Leeming鈥檚 first-ever 鈥楥lass of the Future鈥 competition and will receive brand-new technology.

The prize package includes 24 touchscreen Chromebooks, an interactive screen, classroom furniture, and a professional development package for teachers.

Principal Cherie Hill told the the prize package was well-deserved.

Mangakino School once had a roll of 1800 students, when the town was 鈥渂ooming鈥 during construction of hydro-electric stations on the Waikato River, and by 1954 it was the biggest school in the Southern Hemisphere.

The construction workers have long since moved on but the town remains. Buildings had been removed to downsize the school, and it now has about 50 students.

Keiris, a student at Mangakino School was the actor in the viral video.Keiris, a student at Mangakino School was the actor in the viral video.

Since Hill started at the school in 2022, she has been on a 鈥渕assive journey鈥 with the school board to help remove barriers for students.

Grades have improved, particularly in reading, where achievement has gone from 14% to 68%.

She said they take aspirations of wh膩nau and the wider community as a guiding principal for learning opportunities.

鈥淥ur children get the best of everything and that is the way we see things. Our children deserve the best and we go out and get them the best.鈥

That was the motivation for a viral video made by students to boost their chances of winning the competition and to help them get the 鈥渂oost鈥 in education that they deserve.

鈥淟et鈥檚 face it, our kids can鈥檛 wait, why should they wait? They鈥檝e waited ... kids deserve the best.鈥

Noel Leeming鈥檚 education sector lead Sam Gibson, said the competition came about because they were aware of the 鈥渄igital divide鈥 that existed across classrooms in New Zealand.

鈥淢angakino School has awesome kids who are really creative. Giving them the equipment that will support them with those key skills so they can have the same opportunities in the future as well, is really important.鈥

He said after seeing the video entry made by Mangakino School, it was clear they had been through tough times recently, especially with the delay in construction of a new building.

鈥淚t sort of struck home in the video when Keiris (the boy in the video) said they had nothing to put in the building, and he meant it when he opened the cupboard. It was just authentic.

鈥淭here was a real opportunity and they did an awesome video. But knowing they weren鈥檛 quite as well-resourced as some of the other entries, it was thinking about what they could do with the right equipment.

鈥淚t seemed like an awesome way to get in and help a community that might not otherwise have those same opportunities.鈥

The Noel Leeming competition invited schools nationwide to demonstrate in 200 words, or a creative entry, how the prize could enrich their learning. More than 200 entries were received, and Mangakino School won the prize for explaining how the prize would not only transform their classrooms but the wider Mangakino community.

Malisha Kumar is a multimedia journalist based in Hamilton. She joined the Waikato Herald in 2023 after working for Radio 1XX in Whakat膩ne.

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