326 Don Buck Road, Massey, Auckland
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Massey Primary School
School Evaluation Report
Tēnā koutou e mau manawa rahi ki te kaupapa e aro ake nei, ko te tamaiti te pūtake o te kaupapa. Mā wai rā e kawe, mā tātau katoa.
We acknowledge the collective effort, responsibility and commitment by all to ensure that the child remains at the heart of the matter.
Context
Massey Primary School is located in West Auckland and provides education for learners in Years 1 to 8. The school values are I care, I respect, I value, I reflect, I learn. The school hosts one satellite classroom for Arohanui Special School.
The school is a member of the Tiriwa Kāhui Ako.
There are three parts to this report.
Part A: A summary of the findings from the most recent Education Review Office (ERO) report and/or subsequent evaluation.
Part B: An evaluative summary of learner success and school conditions to inform the school board’s future strategic direction, including any education in Rumaki/bilingual settings.
Part C: The improvement actions prioritised for the school’s next evaluation cycle.
Part A: Previous Improvement Goals
Since the previous ERO report of December 2022, ERO and the school have been working together to evaluate how well the local curriculum supports learner wellbeing, a sense of belonging and equity and excellence for all learners.
Expected Improvements and Findings
The school expected to see:
Improved learner achievement as a result of targeted professional learning and development.
- Achievement in reading, writing and mathematics improved from 2021 to 2023 and accelerated progress for Māori is evident.
- Teachers have deepened their understanding of assessment and apply this to their planning and practice; they use formative practices to provide feedback and feedforward to learners and to set high expectations for progress and achievement.
The development of a school wide positive behaviour programme which is based on Zones of Regulation.
- The school has developed and implemented a programme based on the Zones of Regulation that promotes positive behaviour.
- Learners respond positively to clear expectations for positive behaviour and self-regulation.
- Learners can access a transition class that provides for different sensory and learning needs.
A localised curriculum which reflects the Massey Primary School focus on wellbeing, play-based teaching, and knowledge of the local histories.
- Learners are beginning to learn the history of Massey and surrounding areas as part of research projects.
- Leaders are seeking to make connections with the local iwi, Te Kawerau a Maki to further develop the localised curriculum.
Other Findings
During the course of the evaluation, it was found that professional learning and development led to increased teacher knowledge and skills in teaching writing.
The greatest shift that occurred in response to the school’s action was improved student achievement in writing as a result of the professional learning and development.
Part B: Current State
The following findings are to inform the school’s future priorities for improvement.
Learner Success and Wellbeing
Outcomes are improving for some learners. |
- The majority of learners achieve at and above expected curriculum levels in reading, writing and mathematics.
- There has been an increase in achievement in reading, writing and mathematics since 2021; the school has yet to improve Māori and Pacific learners’ achievement to the same level as their peers.
- Half of all learners attend school regularly; the school does not yet meet the Ministry of Education targets for attendance.
Conditions to support learner success
Experienced leaders work together to support learner success. |
- Leaders collect and analyse achievement and engagement data from a range of sources to plan and monitor school initiatives that target achievement and wellbeing.
- Team and curriculum leaders set high expectations for quality planning and teaching and are working to ensure that consistent learning progressions are in place across the school.
Teachers develop positive and mutually respectful relationships with learners to support engagement. |
- Teachers are strengthening their use of deliberate strategies to teach writing, leading to improvements in writing achievement.
- The curriculum increasingly reflects local contexts in a way that builds on learners’ experiences, knowledge and understanding.
- Teachers create orderly learning environments in which learning time is increasingly maximised, and learners are supported to engage, experiment and apply new learning.
School conditions are strengthening to focus on the progress and achievement of all learners. |
- Professional development is building teachers’ capability to support the school’s goals to increase achievement in writing.
- Established internal evaluation systems and processes are based on regular and increasingly reliable achievement and wellbeing data.
- Leaders are beginning to involve parents and whānau in decision making; the school’s vision, goals, targets and priorities are yet to reflect those set out by the local iwi.
Part C: Where to next?
The agreed next steps for the school are to:
- continue to prioritise strategies and initiatives that increase regular attendance and raise overall achievement for all learners
- design and implement a system for measuring the year-to-year achievement of learners throughout their time at the school to know whether learners are making sufficient progress
- strengthen partnerships with local iwi Te Kawerau a Maki to support development of a Māori Education plan focused on te reo Māori, achievement and attendance
- strengthen partnerships with local Pacific groups to support development of a Pacific Education plan and a learning partnership focused on achievement and attendance.
The agreed actions for the next improvement cycle and timeframes are as follows.
Within three months:
- design a system for the collection of year-to-year data to track learner achievement and wellbeing
- seek and provide opportunities for local iwi Te Kawerau a Maki and Pacific groups to contribute to the school’s achievement and attendance plans for Māori and Pacific learners
- develop a comprehensive cycle for the review of policies and check that all policies meet legislative requirements and good practice guidelines.
Every six months:
- analyse school-wide achievement data to ensure that there is sufficient pace of progress, reducing disparity for Māori and Pacific learners and adjust teaching and learning programmes where necessary
- monitor and adapt attendance initiatives to improve regular attendance.
Annually:
- evaluate and adapt school initiatives based on achievement and wellbeing data over time so that all learners make expected progress
- review the Māori and Pacific achievement and attendance plans against outcomes to ensure that disparities in learning and attendance are addressed
- adapt localised curriculum planning to further embed the aspirations of the Māori, including local iwi and Pacific communities.
Actions taken against these next steps are expected to result in:
- improved achievement in reading, writing and mathematics, including the reduced disparity of achievement for Māori and Pacific learners
- improved attendance to meet Ministry of Education targets
- strengthened teacher capability and confidence to more responsively plan, teach and assess learning through monitoring the achievement of each learner as they progress through the school
- strengthened local curriculum through meaningful learning focused relationships with the local iwi and with community Pacific groups
- strong Board systems for the review and update of school policies and procedures.
Recommendation
ERO recommends that the School Board consider seeking support to maintain a regular cycle of policy review to ensure that school policies meet current legislative requirements and good practice guidelines.
ERO’s role will be to support the school in its evaluation for improvement cycle to improve outcomes for all learners. The next public report on ERO’s website will be a School Evaluation Report and is due within three years.
Me mahi tahi tonu tātau, kia whai oranga a tātau tamariki
Let’s continue to work together for the greater good of all children
Shelley Booysen
Director of Schools
20 September 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
Massey Primary School
Board Assurance with Regulatory and Legislative Requirements Report 2024 to 2027
As of June 2024, the Massey Primary 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
Actions for Compliance
ERO has identified the following areas of non-compliance during the board assurance process:
- obtain police vets of non-teaching and unregistered employees
(Section 104, Education and Training Act 2020) - ensure Workforce Safety Checking policy outlines the required safety checks of children’s workers
(Sections 25, 26 and 27 Children’s Act 2014)
The board has since taken steps to address the areas of non-compliance identified.
Further Information
For further information please contact Massey Primary 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
20 September 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
Massey Primary School
Te Ara Huarau | School Profile Report
Background
This Profile Report was written within six months of the Education Review Office and Massey Primary 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
Massey Primary School is a full primary school located in the increasingly diverse and growing north-west of Auckland. Massey Primary School’s vision is to motivate, empower and develop responsible citizens who access and use a range of resources in order to be actively engaged and contributing members of the community.
The values of I care, I respect, I value, I reflect, I learn about my learning, school, community, and the world underpin teaching and learning programmes. The school is a member of the Tiriwa Kahui Ako. Massey Primary School hosts an Arohanui School satellite class.
Massey Primary School’s strategic priorities for improving outcomes for learners are:
-
improve outcomes for all learners in particular Māori, Pacific and learners requiring learning support
-
accelerate the progress of learners performing below expected New Zealand Curriculum levels
-
support the learning and development of learners with learning needs, including neurodiverse and gifted and talented learners.
You can find a copy of the school’s strategic and annual plan on Massey Primary School’s website.
ERO and the school are working together to evaluate how well the local curriculum supports learner wellbeing, a sense of belonging and equity and excellence for all learners.
The rationale for selecting this evaluation is:
-
a localised curriculum which focusses on learner wellbeing and equity and excellence has been introduced
-
the school continues to invest in professional learning and development initiatives to lift achievement across the curriculum
The school expects to see:
-
improved learner achievement as a result of targeted professional learning and development
-
increased learner voice through reflective learning conversations between learners and teacher
-
the development of a school wide positive behaviour programme which is based on Zones of Regulation
-
a localised curriculum which reflects the Massey Primary School focus on wellbeing, play based teaching, and knowledge of the local histories.
Strengths
The school can draw from the following strengths to support the school in its goal to evaluate how well the local curriculum supports learner wellbeing, a sense of belonging and equity and excellence for all learners:
-
a professional leadership team which promotes excellence and equity through targeted improvement programmes and initiatives
-
leaders and teachers design and implement teaching and learning which is based on evidence and professional learning and development
-
a positive and culturally responsive school climate that promotes of engagement and wellbeing.
Where to next?
Moving forward, the school will prioritise:
-
targeted professional learning and development in Better Start Literacy and writing
-
further implementation of a localised curriculum which promotes learner wellbeing, play based learning and knowledge of the histories of the area
-
continuing to develop the Massey Primary School graduate profile
-
ongoing evaluation of initiatives to inform future planning.
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.
Filivaifale Jason Swann
Director Review and Improvement Services (Northern)
Northern Region | Te Tai Raki
6 December 2022
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
Massey Primary School
Board Assurance with Regulatory and Legislative Requirements Report 2022 to 2025
As of May 2022, the Massey Primary 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 Massey Primary School Board.
The next 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.
Filivaifale Jason Swann
Director Review and Improvement Services (Northern)
Northern Region | Te Tai Raki
6 December 2022
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
Massey Primary School - 02/11/2016
1 Context
Massey Primary in West Auckland is a full primary school with students from 22 different ethnic backgrounds. Teaching staff are culturally diverse and range from those who are new to the profession and a number with long service at this school. Leaders and teachers are members of many local education networks and this provides benefits for children and their whānau. The board of trustees chairperson and school principal are very experienced in their roles.
2 Equity and excellence
The vision and valued outcomes defined by the school for all children are "to motivate, empower and develop responsible citizens who can access and use a range of resources" and be actively engaged and contributing members of the community. The school strives to develop children's critical thinking skills and confidence along with developing their ability to take considered risks and manage their own learning and behaviour in varied learning environments.
The school encourages children to be creative, innovative and literate in the use of e-learning technology. Leaders want children to leave Massey Primary equipped to be lifelong learners with the skills to develop and maintain positive relationships with diverse people.
The school's achievement information shows that over the past three years children achieve well in relation to National Standards in reading and mathematics. The overall achievement of Māori children is similar to that of non-Māori. Of the children who spend most of their time at Massey school and leave after Year 8, more than 85 percent are at the National Standard in reading and mathematics. Leaders and teachers employ a range of strategies to support children who transition into the school from other schools and continue to carefully monitor these children as they progress through the school.
The school reports that over the last three years there has been a downward trend in overall achievement in National Standards. This trend is most apparent in writing. School leaders have also identified a disparity in the overall achievement of Pacific children in comparison to their non-Pacific peers. Leaders and teachers have developed specific strategic goals to address these trends.
Leaders are tracking achievement data more closely to monitor children's progress. All teachers have specific Māori and Pacific children whom they target and monitor for accelerated progress. School leaders report to the board on the effectiveness of teaching practices to accelerate achievement.
Children with special needs progress well towards National Standards. Individual Education Plans (IEPs) reflect shared goals formed collaboratively by parents, teachers and children. The support provided for these children is personalised and regularly reported to parents and the board.
Teachers make good use of moderation processes to determine how well children are achieving in relation to the National Standards. Overall teacher judgements reflect the breadth of the National Standards and are informed by children's ongoing learning and nationally referenced assessment tools.
Since the last ERO evaluation the school has strengthened the use of internal evaluation, inquiry and knowledge building to improve the effectiveness of teaching and learning. Leaders have developed a structured and deliberate approach to assessment, planning and evaluation. Professional learning has improved formative teaching practices. As a result, teachers are more successfully engaging children in the learning process. Teachers are increasingly focussed on children understanding and articulating their progress, achievement and next learning steps.
3 Accelerating achievement
How effectively does this school respond to Māori children whose learning and achievement need acceleration?
The school is effective in responding to Māori children whose learning and achievement need acceleration.
The school has established robust systems to respond to Māori children whose learning and achievement need acceleration. Leaders identify and monitor their progress. The evidence of Māori children making accelerated progress and achievement towards National Standards is reported to the board.
Teachers collaborate and collate their responses to children's learning needs and share ideas about how best to cater for them at monitoring meetings. Team leaders facilitate these professional meetings with teachers. Targeted professional learning and development for teachers supports them to be more reflective practitioners.
The specialised teaching environment for junior classes has a focus on responding flexibly to children's learning readiness and needs. Children are involved in planning their weekly programmes with teachers and take ownership of their learning. Leaders have a strategic goal to extend this innovative teaching practice across the school.
How effectively does this school respond to other children whose learning and achievement need acceleration?
The school effectively responds to other children whose learning and achievement need acceleration, including students with special educational needs and children who are English language learners (ESOL). The school makes very good use of the ESOL funding it receives for the large numbers of students from different language backgrounds.
Teachers know their children well and establish target groups of children. While most of these children are of Māori and Pacific descent there is a growing number from the diverse community of learners who now live within the school zone. Teachers gather data on these children, plan appropriate programmes of learning or interventions and carefully monitor and report on these children's progress, achievement and acceleration.
4 School conditions
How effectively do the school’s curriculum and other organisational processes and practices develop and enact the school’s vision, values, goals and targets for equity and excellence?
The school’s curriculum and other organisational processes and practices are very effective in developing and enacting the school’s vision, values, goals and priorities for equity and excellence.
Senior leaders, teachers and trustees have a common understanding of, and commitment to, accelerating children's progress. Teachers personalise programmes and modify their practice and programmes to accelerate the progress of children at risk of not achieving.
The teaching and learning in the Habitat (the teaching area for new entrants to Year 3) is leading change at Massey Primary. Young learners co-construct their learning with their teachers based around their needs, levels of competency, interests and learning challenges. Teachers provide advice, guidance, expert tuition and new learning opportunities to help children acquire the skills and knowledge they will need now, and in the future. Current data shows that these children are making accelerated progress. School leaders have a strategic approach to provide focussed professional learning and development for all teachers to extend this teaching approach across all levels of the school.
Knowledgeable trustees bring a range of expertise to their roles. The school's charter contains goals, targets and actions focused on accelerating student progress and achievement. An ongoing commitment to biculturalism is led by the whānau support group who provide guidance to the board and the leadership team. The charter supports the enactment of equity and excellence through key improvement strategies.
Positive relationships with parents are established at the time of enrolment and continue throughout children's time at the school. Senior leaders and teachers are receptive to parent feedback and share with parents and whānau how the school might best cater for their child's learning and wellbeing. Children who are at risk of not achieving benefit from regular mentoring by key teaching staff.
Leadership is child-focused, distributed and responsive. Leaders establish clear and consistent school expectations that are designed to support teaching and learning. Professional capability is fostered very well through the use of external professional learning and internal expertise. Evidence-based inquiry and evaluation is encouraging leaders and teachers to think and do things differently to foster equity and improve outcomes for children.
Trustees and senior leaders have looked for opportunities to better engage groups of children who are at risk of not achieving. The school has joined Māori Achieving Success as Māori (MASAM) which is a network of local schools with a focus on promoting positive outcomes for Māori children. The school is linked through to a similar network STEAM, which has a focus on improving learning in Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Mathematics. These networks are engaging children and whānau and providing more teaching and learning opportunities for learners and teachers.
School leaders and teachers make clear links between improving teaching practice to improve learning opportunities for children. Teacher appraisal processes and teachers' inquiries into the effectiveness of their practice have been strengthened. Leadership of the curriculum is distributed across teaching teams as part of building individual and collective leadership capacity.
The school's whānau group meet monthly and report to the board. Local kaumātua and kuia support the whānau group and the school for tikanga Māori. The board has employed a specialist to give guidance to the school te reo Maori programme and kapa haka. Children choose to attend kapa haka and show pride when representing their school at formal occasions.
5 Going forward
How well placed is the school to accelerate the achievement of all children who need it?
Leaders and teachers:
- know the children whose learning and achievement need to be accelerated
- respond effectively to the strengths, needs and interests of each child
- regularly evaluate how well teaching is working for these children
- act on what they know works well for each child
- build teacher capability effectively to achieve equitable outcomes for all children
- are well placed to achieve and sustain equitable and excellent outcomes for all children.
Leaders have implemented a range of strategies that are having an impact on accelerating children's progress and achievement in National Standards.
The new learning environment and the innovative teaching approaches in the junior school are having a positive impact on accelerating children's progress and achievement. It is also impacting positively on children's level of engagement. Children are taking more responsibility for their learning. Parents are also more involved in their children's learning. Ongoing upgrades of teaching spaces is part of a plan to extend the teaching approach used in the junior classes, across the school.
The school uses rigorous self review to evaluate its work to accelerate children's achievement. This includes leaders identifying trends in student achievement. These achievement trends are reviewed, monitored, and reported to the board by leaders. This enables the board to plan strategically and resource appropriately to support children's learning. The board uses ERO's evaluation indicators to review its performance and plan for improvements.
The school's performance management system is effective and aligned to the board's strategic goals for accelerating student achievement. Leaders and teachers use teacher appraisal to improve teaching practice and to improve learning outcomes for all children.
Leaders have strategically planned for change as children move through the school. Leaders provide targeted professional development for teachers. Leaders and teachers continue to forge learning networks with other local schools to extend learning opportunities for all children.
The school's current strategic, annual and other planning provide the framework and the components required to guide systematic actions aimed at promoting acceleration and further student success.
ERO is likely to carry out the next review in three years.
6 Board assurance on legal requirements
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:
- board administration
- curriculum
- management of health, safety and welfare
- personnel management
- 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
- processes for appointing staff
- stand down, suspensions, expulsions and exclusions
- attendance
- compliance with the provisions of the Vulnerable Children Act 2014.
7 Recommendation
ERO recommends that school leaders continue to review and refine charter goals and targets and ensure that all teachers are supported to develop quality innovative practices at all levels of the school. This is likely to help the school achieve and sustain equitable and excellent outcomes for all students.
Graham Randell
Deputy Chief Review Officer Northern
2 November 2016
About the school
Location |
Massey, Auckland |
|
Ministry of Education profile number |
1363 |
|
School type |
Full Primary (Years 1 to 8) |
|
School roll |
425 |
|
Gender composition |
Boys 53% |
|
Ethnic composition |
Māori |
31% |
Review team on site |
August 2016 |
|
Date of this report |
2 November 2016 |
|
Most recent ERO report(s) |
Education Review |
August 2013 |