Holy Trinity Catholic Primary School

Holy Trinity Catholic Primary School - 08/05/2020

School Context

Holy Trinity Catholic Primary School is a state integrated school opened in February 2017 in Takanini, Auckland. The school caters for children from Years 1 to 8. The school roll continues to grow, and at the time of this review the roll was 226. The school has students from many ethnic backgrounds. There are a large number of students for whom English is not their home language.

A significant feature has been the establishment of a new community, with the school as the community hub. Since the school opened there have been changes in staffing, including the appointment of a new deputy principal.

The school’s vision is for students to ‘Learn - Ka Ako, Love - Ka Aroha, and Serve - Ka Manaaki in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.’ The vision is underpinned by the school and Catholic values of Unity - Kotahitanga, Integrity - Ngākau Pono, Respect - Manaakitia, Compassion - Arohanui, Resilience - Ngāwari, and Excellence - Hiranga.

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

  • achievement in reading, writing and mathematics
  • progress and achievement of target students
  • learning support programmes for students with additional learning needs
  • health and wellbeing
  • attendance.

Students’ education is provided in purpose-built learning environments that are innovative and well designed. The school is a member of the South Auckland Catholic Schools Kāhui Ako|Community of Learning (COL).

This is the school’s first full Education Review Report.

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 working towards achieving equitable and excellent outcomes for its students.

School achievement data for 2018 and 2019 show that most students achieve at or above expected levels in reading, writing and mathematics. It is timely for leaders to develop systems that monitor and track trends and patterns for groups of students over time.

Māori students have made good progress in reading and writing with the majority achieving at the expected curriculum levels. Achievement information shows most Māori students achieve the expected curriculum levels in mathematics and the majority in writing.

Achievement for Pacific students shows most achieving at expected curriculum levels in writing, and the majority achieving in reading and mathematics.

Students achieve well in relation to other school-valued outcomes. They talk about what helps them to learn, have a strong sense of belonging, and demonstrate the school values.

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

Schoolwide processes are becoming more effective in identifying and accelerating the learning for those Māori and other students who need this. School data demonstrates that some students have made accelerated progress.

Teachers have good systems in place to identify children who need targeted support. Teachers, learning assistants and leaders know students well. They use this knowledge to provide targeted support for individuals and are responsive to developing the whole child.

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 board of trustees ensures good stewardship in leading the school forward to enable equity and excellence for its students. Strong relationships between trustees and school leaders are based on trust, integrity and openness. The board’s practices help ensure there is coherence between the school's charter and annual plans, and that these are an integral part of all processes within the school.

Partnerships with whānau are strongly promoted and highly evident. They have a positive influence on children’s learning and wellbeing at all levels. The perspectives of students, whānau and staff are valued and contribute to internal evaluation processes focusing on improving outcomes for students. This involvement helps to build a sense of ownership about school practices and procedures.

Catholic and school values are an integral part of children’s lives. Children benefit from the calm and positive communities that promote and support their learning.

The principal builds strong relational trust and highly effective participation at every level of the school. Her leadership promotes a coherent approach to professional learning that builds staff capability through a collaborative inquiry approach. Effective induction processes support new staff to the school.

Teachers and leaders meet regularly to discuss the progress of target students and to share effective practices. Individual Education Plans (IEPs) reflect shared goals formed collaboratively by parents, teachers and children. The support provided for these children is personalised, catering for children’s learning and wellbeing. Children who have English as an additional language are well supported. An experienced learning assistant works with these children in class or in small groups to support their English skill development.

External professional development in literacy, with a focus on oral language, is positively influencing teaching practice. Responding to disparity in writing for some groups of students and boys through differentiated writing workshops is supporting teachers to focus on the specific needs of these students.

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

Students can make choices in some of their learning. To increase learner agency, leaders and teachers plan to facilitate opportunities for students to lead their learning.

Learning maps are used schoolwide and provide useful information on the ways individual students learn. To deepen children’s learning and build a common language of learning across the school, teachers could extend the use of children’s individual learning maps.

It is timely to increase the tracking of schoolwide trends and patterns for accelerating the progress of groups of children. Leaders now need to systematically target these groups and evaluate regularly to promote accelerated shifts in progress.

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 Holy Trinity Catholic Primary School’s performance in achieving valued outcomes for its students is: Well placed.

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:

  • an inclusive learning environment that promotes students’ strong sense of belonging
  • effective leadership that builds collective responsibility through collaboratively enacting the school’s vision and values
  • trustees who actively represent and serve the school
  • educationally powerful connections with whānau that engage them in reciprocal learning-centred relationships to promote success for their children.

Next steps

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

  • increasing opportunities for students to lead their learning
  • extending the use of children’s learning maps to deepen individualised learning, achievement and progress
  • leaders collating and analysing achievement information to provide greater clarity around patterns and trends for groups of students whose learning needs accelerating.

Steve Tanner

Director Review and Improvement Services Northern

Northern Region

8 May 2020

About the school

The Education Counts website provides further information about the school’s student population, student engagement and student achievement.

Holy Trinity Catholic Primary School - 22/12/2017

1 Introduction

A New School Assurance Review is a review of particular areas of school performance and is undertaken to specific terms of reference.

New School Assurance Reviews are generally undertaken within the first year of the school’s opening.

Terms of Reference

This review is based on an evaluation of the performance of Holy Trinity Catholic Primary School. The terms of reference for the review are to provide assurance to the community:

  • that the school is well placed to provide for students
  • that the school is operating in accordance with the vision articulated by the board of trustees.

2 Context

Holy Trinity Catholic Primary School is a state integrated full primary school for Years 1 to 8. At the time of the review, the school is providing for students from Years 1 to 6. The opening of the school has provided local families with the option of Catholic education. Local Catholic iwi identify with the school, and provide support at special events and ceremonies.

3 Background

Holy Trinity Catholic Primary School opened in February 2017 with 63 students. The current roll is 98 children. The school is designed to cater initially for 250 students, drawing on the school’s affiliated parishes of St Marys and St Annes. The roll is predicted to grow significantly as housing development in the Takanini area continues.

The school buildings are designed to promote innovative teaching and learning. The set up phase of this new school has been led and managed by the establishment board, board governance facilitator, principal, and leadership team.

In July 2017, board elections were held. Five parent representatives were elected, and four Bishop’s representatives were appointed to the new board. The school is a member of the South Auckland Catholic Schools Kāhui Ako|Community of Learning (CoL).

4 Findings

The Catholic character of the school led by the principal and leadership team, is highly evident. Children can articulate the vision and describe what it means in action. The school vision guides decision making, documentation and the curriculum.

Children have good opportunities to learn and engage with a future-focused curriculum. They learn in ‘learning communities’ that have a calm and positive tone. They can talk about their learning and describe their next learning steps.

Children are self-managing and collaborative. Children support each other as they learn together. Senior leaders have identified that the ongoing development of student agency, and the deepening of student led inquiry, are natural next steps for children’s learning.

School leaders recognise that teachers need time and support to adapt to the teaching requirements of an Innovative Learning Environment (ILE). To support teachers to strengthen their practice in this area, leaders have professional development in place for 2018.

Senior leaders have developed coherent systems for monitoring and tracking the progress and achievement of all students. Teachers and leaders have identified and responded to students who need to make better progress, and are finding ways to support these students.

Teachers report individual children’s ongoing progress and achievement through cumulative online postings that are accessed by parents and whānau. Parents, children, and teachers also have the opportunity for face-to-face discussions about children’s progress and achievement. The board receives useful progress reports in relation to student achievement at their monthly meetings.

Bicultural practice is evident throughout the school. Children participate respectfully in aspects of powhiri, haka, karakia and mihi. Aspects of te ao Māori are further woven through the school’s Catholic character programme.

Senior leaders work cohesively in leading the school. They are engaged, reflective, and improvement focused, and work closely with a committed board.

It is now timely for the board and leadership team to ensure that the identified key next steps are fully implemented. These should include:

  • clarifying and articulating the vision for ILE teaching and learning

  • establishing high expectations of teachers to implement the vision

  • reviewing processes to ensure appointments are a good fit for the school.

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:

  • school management and reporting
  • curriculum
  • management of health, safety and welfare
  • personnel management
  • financial management
  • asset management.

During the review, ERO checked the following items because they have a potentially high impact on students' achievement:

  • emotional safety of students (including prevention of bullying and sexual harassment)
  • physical safety of students
  • teacher registration
  • processes for appointing staff
  • stand-downs, suspensions, expulsions and exclusions
  • attendance.

Conclusion

At Holy Trinity Primary Catholic School, children learn in innovative learning environments (ILE’s) through a curriculum designed to uphold the school’s Charism of the ‘Holy Trinity’, and the school’s vision statement of ‘Learn, Love and Serve’. The curriculum is increasingly promoting an inquiry approach, and the key learning areas. The school is governed and led effectively.

ERO is likely to carry out the first full review of the school by the end of the third year of the school’s operation.

Graham Randell

Deputy Chief Review Officer Northern

Te Tai Raki - Northern Region

About the School

Location

Takanini

Ministry of Education profile number

743

School type

Full Primary (Years 1 to 8)

School roll

98

Gender composition

Boys 58 Girls 40

Ethnic composition

Māori
Pākehā
Filipino
Samoan
Indian
Tongan
Cook Island Māori
other ethnic groups

8
23
17
17
12
11
4
6

Review team on site

November 2017

Date of this report

22 December 2017