St Joseph's School
Te Kura o Hato Hōhepa ki a Tāhuna

Our Learning

We are proud of the way our students embrace the learning opportunities they have and in the way they create meaning through self directed projects that often take them out into their community.  This section will give you background information and suggest ways you can support your child's learning journey.  

Celebrating Learning

We are proud of the way our students embrace the learning opportunities they have and in the way they create meaning through self directed projects that often take them out into their community.  This section will give you background information and suggest ways you can support your child's learning journey.  

9 Learning Areas
Religious Education
English
Mathematics & Statistics
The Arts
Health & Physical Education 
Technology
Science
Social Sciences
Learning Languages

MORE about learning areas

Principles
High Expectations 
Learning to Learn 
Treaty of Waitangi 
Community
Engagement
Cultural Diversity 
Coherence 
Inclusion 
Future Focus

Key Competencies
Managing Self 
Relating to Others 
Participating and Contributing 
Thinking
Using Language, Symbols & Text 

Values
Excellence
Innovation, Inquiry & Curiosity
Diversity
Equity
Community & Participation
Ecological Sustainability
Integrity
Respect

Year 7 & 8 Programme

At St Joseph's School, we recognise the importance and value of the Intermediate years - Years 7 and 8. As a result, our senior students have different opportunities when they get to this stage in their schooling. 

Servant Leadership

Growing leadership is important to us at St Joseph's School. Children are given opportunities from 5 years old to enable them to develop the necessary skills so that, by the time they are in Year 8, they, as Year 8 school leaders, will be able to have significant input into making St Joseph's School a great school to attend. Our vision is to "create confident learners who, like Jesus, make a positive difference" and our Year 8 students definitely believe that they can do this through their leadership roles. We follow Jesus' example of servant leadership, and we encourage our leaders to use their position of leadership to serve others, putting others first at all times.

Year 8 leaders attend a Leadership Conference in Dunedin each year. This is an amazing opportunity to hear from a variety of people who have been successful in a range of fields including sport, television and motivational speaking to name a few. Speakers share with the students what has helped them in their life's journey, give them ideas about how the students can make the most of opportunities in their own lives and how they can lead others to be the best they can be. 

All Year 8 leaders have a responsibility in our school, they are our Ākonga Rangatira (Student Leaders). The Ākonga Rangatira roles are: 
Kaitiaki
Whānau Leader
Media Leader
Awhina Leader
Hākinakina Leader
Toi Leader
Audio Visual Leader

At the end of each year, Year 7 students discuss and identify leadership opportunities for the following year. Throughout the year, the Ākonga Rangatira work on their ideas to make St Joseph's School, our local community and our global community a better place for all. 

Technology and Science

Our specialist technology and science teachers work with our Year 7 and 8 students. 

Learning Languages

Our Year 7 and 8 students will learn a foreign language from a tutor.

Learning Through Play

Play based learning is a time of discovery and  allows teachers and students to co-create a positive learning environment where students direct and take responsibility for their own learning with the guidance of their teacher. Children develop many important skills through this process including key competencies and learner qualities including problem solving, using their imagination, building persistence and resilience, communication, negotiation, patience and turn taking.  As well as these, we discovered the development of lots of oral language, reading, writing, maths, science, technology, health and social sciences.

At St Joseph's School, we wanted to make children's transition from early childhood education to school as smooth as possible. We saw Play Based Learning as a way to do this and have seen great results so far. We also know that reading and writing skills develop best for children who have good oral language and a broad and rich vocabulary. This time provides lots of opportunities for children to talk and build their vocabulary in a range of meaningful contexts. 
Children love this time at our school. If you want further information, please speak to our New Entrant teacher, Lisa Dickson.

Restorative Practice

The Positive Behaviour for Learning (PB4L) Restorative Practice model focuses on building and maintaining positive, respectful relationships across the school community and offers school staff best-practice tools and techniques to restore relationships when things go wrong. By building and maintaining positive, respectful relationships within a school, staff to staff, staff to student and student to student, issues are more easily managed. PB4L Restorative Practice is based on a set of best practice tools and techniques to support a consistent and sustainable approach to managing positive, respectful relationships within the school. Through the restorative process, children learn to recognise that their behaviour has an impact on others which at times is negative and it provides the opportunity to restore the relationships that may have damaged. Benefits of using restorative practice include:
     -  everyone has a voice;
     -  it provides the opportunity to develop communication as a means of resolving conflict;
     -  it encourages children to take personal responsibility for their behaviour choices;
     -  the mana and tapu (dignity) of all is honoured;
     -  there in the opportunity for the empowerment of those who have experienced harm.

When leading children through a restorative conversation reflecting on an incident of harm, teachers use the following question prompts.

To the person who has harmed:


  • What happened?
  • What were you thinking when ...? (for each main part of the event) - if they do not respond, ask, Was it right or wrong? Was it respectful or disrespectful?
  • Who do you think has been affected by what you did?
  • In what way?
  • What do you need to do to make things right?
  • How can we make sure this doesn't happen again?
  • What can I do to help?

To the person who has been harmed:

  • What happened?
  • What did you think when (for each main part of the event) happened?
  • How has it affected you?
  • What's been the worst of it?
  • What's needed to make things right?
  • How can we make sure this doesn't happen again?
SENCO (Special Education Needs Coordinator)

The SENCO (Special Education Needs Coordinator) at St Joseph's School is Belinda Davidson.

The SENCO is responsible for:

  • ensuring that teachers identify and track students who have learning or behaviour needs that are outside the normal classroom parameters.
  • assisting teachers to make applications to outside agencies.
  • liaising with families, outside agencies and classroom teachers.
  • ensuring children with special learning and behaviour needs have updated Individual Education Plans.
  • allocating teacher aide time.
Moderate Learning and Behaviour Needs

Resource Teachers of Learning and Behaviour  (RTLB)
 
Resource Teachers of Learning and Behaviour (RTLB) work with, and provide itinerant specialist support, to students and teachers in order to improve the education outcomes for students with moderate learning and/or behaviour difficulties. We have two RTLB teachers who support our students; they are based at Queenstown Primary School.

G
roup Special Education 
Add fee information here.

Speech Language Therapists

Speech-Language Therapy is the treatment for children with speech and/or language disorders. 

English Language Learners

We have families from many different cultures and we value and celebrate this at our school.  

St Joseph's School applies for funding support from the Ministry of Education and this is used for employing a Learning Assistant to work with children for whom English is not their first language. 

Our learning assistants and teachers have all done professional learning about how to support learners for whom English is not their first language.