Bailey Road School

Bailey Road School

Te Ara Huarau | School Profile Report  

Background

This Profile Report was written within 7 months of the Education Review Office and Bailey Road 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

Context

Bailey Road School is a culturally diverse primary school catering for students in Years 1 to 8 in Mount Wellington, Auckland. The school’s heart values of honesty, effort, achievement, respect, and togetherness are the school’s core beliefs.

Bailey Road School’s strategic priorities for improving outcomes for learners are:

  • improving student outcomes through our consistent pedagogical approach
  • improving student outcomes through our consistent curriculum design and delivery
  • improving student outcomes through consistently understanding and prioritising the important role of wellbeing in our success.

You can find a copy of the school’s strategic and annual plan on Bailey Road School’s website.

ERO and the school are working together to evaluate how effectively the school leadership structure impacts on pedagogy as well as equitable and excellent learning outcomes for all students.

The rationale for selecting this evaluation is:

  • ensuring effective leadership is achieving equitable and improved learning outcomes for all students
  • to accelerate the progress of all students who are not yet at the expected curriculum level in literacy and mathematics
  • continuing to build the capability of teachers to deliver learning programmes to meet the needs of students.

The school expects to see:

  • leaders and teachers using achievement information and formative teaching practice consistently to inform the delivery of learning programmes and improve learning outcomes for all students 
  • greater consistency of teaching practice across the school
  • school wide lifts in literacy and mathematics achievement and greater equity for priority learners
  • accelerated progress for students working towards curriculum expectations.

Strengths

The school can draw from the following strengths to it in its goal to ensure the school’s leadership effectively impacts pedagogy, and equitable and excellent learning outcomes for all students.

  • leadership that reflects commitment to the school’s strategic direction and is focussed on improving equity and excellence for all students
  • assessment systems and practices identify, monitor and report the progress and achievement of all students
  • indoor and outdoor learning environments and opportunities support the delivery of the New Zealand Curriculum
  • culturally diverse school reconnecting and building educational links with parents, whānau and the local community.

Where to next?

Moving forward, the school will prioritise:

  • continuing to build teachers capability and capacity to use assessment information
  • ongoing relevant professional learning to inform teaching practice and deliver learning programmes to meet the needs of all students
  • embedding and sustaining school wide consistency of effective teaching practice.

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

18 March 2024

About the School

The Education Counts website provides further information about the school’s student population, student engagement and student achievement.  educationcounts.govt.nz/home

Bailey Road School

Board Assurance with Regulatory and Legislative Requirements Report 2023 to 2026 

As of June 2023, the Bailey Road School Board has attested to the following regulatory and legislative requirements:

Board Administration

Yes

Curriculum

Yes

Management of Health, Safety and Welfare

Yes

Personnel Management

Yes

Finance

Yes

Assets

Yes

Further Information

For further information please contact Bailey Road 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

18 March 2024

About the School 

The Education Counts website provides further information about the school's student population, student engagement and student achievement. educationcounts.govt.nz/home

Bailey Road School - 04/03/2020

School Context

Bailey Road School provides education for students in Years 1 to 8. The roll of 476 is drawn from a culturally diverse community. Pacific students make up approximately 43 percent of the school population. Māori students, comprising 24 percent, are the second largest group.

The school’s vision is Whaia Ngā Taumata - Aim High. The valued outcomes for students are expressed through the HEART values of Honesty, Empathy, Affirmation, Respect and Trust.

The school’s four key strategic goals are student progress and achievement, effective governance, school culture and engaging with whānau, and leadership. The annual learning goals focus on literacy and mathematics.

Leaders and teachers regularly report to the board schoolwide information about outcomes for students in the following areas:

  • reading, writing and mathematics for all groups of students
  • results from surveys
  • progress against the school’s annual goals.

Since the 2016 ERO review, the school has appointed three principals. The current principal is managing a period of significant change.

The school recently changed the timetable to maximise students’ learning time. The school is about to be restructured into three Year 1 to 8 whānau groups, to support collaborative relationships between teachers at all levels. Mathematics has been identified as a priority area for professional learning and development in 2020.

The school is a member of the Maungakiekie Community of Learning l Kāhui Ako (CoL).

Evaluation Findings

1 Equity and excellence – achievement of valued outcomes for students

1.1 How well is the school achieving equitable and excellent outcomes for all its students?

The school is making progress towards achieving equitable and excellent outcomes. Most students achieve at or above curriculum expectations in reading, and the majority achieve at or above expectations in writing and mathematics. Most students have sustained sufficient rates of progress over time.

The school’s achievement information shows the majority of Māori and Pacific students are achieving at or above curriculum expectations in reading, writing and mathematics. Disparity remains for boys.

Students with additional needs make good progress against their individual learning goals. Students who are speakers of English as an additional language achieve successfully. They participate in relevant learning programmes and are fully integrated in the school’s inclusive culture.

The school is currently reviewing its other valued outcomes for students.

1.2 How well is the school accelerating learning for those Māori and other students who need this?

School achievement information for 2019 shows evidence of some acceleration for students whose learning is at risk in relation to reading, writing and mathematics. The school recognises the need to monitor progress information for Māori and Pacific students. There is more work to do in accelerating the progress of those students who need to make more than one years progress in a year.

2 School conditions for equity and excellence – processes and practices

2.1 What school processes and practices are effective in enabling achievement of equity and excellence, and acceleration of learning?

The principal is collaboratively developing the school’s vision, values, goals and targets to gain a schoolwide shared language and pedagogy. He is strategically using professional learning and development to improve teacher content and assessment knowledge. The new school leadership team supports equity and excellence through a considered approach and careful alignment with strategic goals. Leaders have a coherent approach to organisational change and building leadership and teacher capability.

Students participate and learn in a caring, inclusive learning community. The school recognises and supports students’ language, culture and identity. Transitions for students into, within and beyond the school are well managed. Students have equitable access to digital technologies as they pursue the increasingly locally-focused curriculum.

The board has a shared vision for the school and sets a clear direction for future improvement. It has provided continuity throughout changes of school leadership. Trustees know their roles and responsibilities. They identify, seek and use their knowledge, expertise and experience to actively represent and serve the school community in their stewardship role.

2.2 What further developments are needed in school processes and practices for achievement of equity and excellence, and acceleration of learning?

Leaders and teachers have been working towards ensuring that achievement information is dependable, consistent and well analysed to clearly show the progress and achievement of students. It is now a priority for teachers, leaders and trustees to establish a coherent picture of those students who require acceleration through specific target setting and monitoring of progress to ensure equity and excellence for all groups.

The school should continue to develop and embed a relevant, local curriculum, in partnership with the wider school community. This continued development should enhance engagement and promote equity and acceleration for those learners most at risk of not achieving.

The leadership team is working collaboratively to lead teachers’ professional learning and promote more consistent, quality teaching practices. Reflection on and evaluation of practice should focus on what makes the biggest difference for learners.

To sustain improvement and innovation the board, principal and teachers should strengthen their understanding and use of internal evaluation. They need to develop a useful evaluation framework and embed this in policies, systems and practices across the school.

3 Board Assurance on Legal Requirements

Before the review, the board 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:

  • board administration
  • curriculum
  • management of health, safety and welfare
  • personnel management
  • finance
  • asset management.

During the review, ERO checked the following items because they have a potentially high impact on student safety and wellbeing:

  • emotional safety of students (including prevention of bullying and sexual harassment)
  • physical safety of students
  • teacher registration and certification
  • processes for appointing staff
  • stand down, suspension, expulsion and exclusion of students
  • attendance
  • school policies in relation to meeting the requirements of the Children’s Act 2014.

4 ERO’s Overall Judgement

On the basis of the findings of this review, ERO’s overall evaluation judgement of Bailey Road School performance in achieving valued outcomes for its students is: Developing.

ERO’s Framework: Overall Findings and Judgement Tool derived from School Evaluation Indicators: Effective Practice for Improvement and Learner Success is available on ERO’s website.

5 Going forward

Key strengths of the school

For sustained improvement and future learner success, the school can draw on existing strengths in:

  • welcoming, settled environments that promote student participation
  • a strategic commitment to developing a relevant curriculum that reflects the local context and integrates digital technologies
  • a commitment to growing teachers’ and leaders’ professional capability and collective capacity to improve outcomes for all students.

Next steps

For sustained improvement and future learner success, priorities for further development are in:

  • building evaluative capability so that trustees, leaders and teachers can ascertain the effectiveness of programmes, strategies, and initiatives on learning outcomes for all students
  • developing strategies to help teachers reduce disparities and accelerate the learning of those students whose progress requires this
  • strengthening collaboration and developing learning partnerships with parents and whānau.

To improve current practice, the board of trustees should:

  • strengthen the implementation of policies and procedures.

Steve Tanner

Director Review and Improvement Services

Northern Region

4 March 2020

About the school

Location

Mount Wellington, Auckland

Ministry of Education profile number

1216

School type

Full Primary (Years 1-8)

School roll

476

Gender composition

Girls 47%

Boys 53%

Ethnic composition

Māori 24%

NZ European/Pākehā 9%

Samoan 14%

Tongan 12%

Indian 8%

Niuean 7%

Filipino 5%

other ethnic groups 21%

Students with Ongoing Resourcing Funding (ORS)

Yes

Provision of Māori medium education

No

Review team on site

December 2019

Date of this report

4 March 2020

Most recent ERO report(s)

Education Review August 2016

Education Review April 2013

Education Review February 2010