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  • Home
  • About Us
    • EoY Financials
    • Our People
    • Ngā Manu Aorere
    • Our Values
    • Principal's Message
    • ERO Report
    • Community >
      • Adult Education
      • Aorere Foundation
      • Aorere Newsletter
      • Communites of Learning
      • Lockdown Support >
        • Lockdown - August-dECember 2021
  • Aorere Childcare
  • Curriculum
    • Learning Areas
    • NCEA Guide- Students
    • NCEA Changes for 2021
    • Co-Curricular >
      • Sport
      • The Arts
      • Culture
      • Enrichment
  • International Students
  • Enrolments
    • Online Enrolment Form
    • School Zone
    • Uniform
    • Stationery
  • Contact Us

Ngā Manu Aorere 

Student Leadership at Aorere College

Leadership is expressed in a number of ways. Some leaders lead from the front- they are the ones that are publicly acknowledged and are looked to for guidance and instruction. But, importantly, there are leaders who do not seek that public recognition, but prefer to remain in the background where their skills of leadership are essential to the functioning of society or the family or the school. Both of these types of leadership are essential- and the important thing to remember is that the leaders at the front cannot function without the support and skills of others in the background. 
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We need to recognise that people who take on public leadership roles are brave; they put themselves out there and in doing so often encounter criticism for their actions. It is important for us all to realise that we cannot function as a family group, as a school, as a society, without leaders. Without leaders everything would fall apart. Leaders owe us service, honesty, integrity and care. In return, we owe our leaders respect, support and admiration for their work. 


As a school we have made a decision to reconceptualise the nature of student leadership. In a move towards embracing biculturalism and recognizing the importance of Māori as the tangata whenua, we have adopted new names for our student leaders which better reflect the nature of student leadership in our school. Instead of ‘prefect’ which comes from the Latin and means ‘set in authority over’, we have the following names, which additionally are gender neutral and therefore more inclusive:

Manu Tāiko    ‘Manu’ means bird which connects well with ‘rere’ which means flight. The Manu Tāiko is a sentinel bird and symbolises guardianship and protecting others. This is the name for our Head Students.

Manukura    This is the name of our other student leaders

Collectively the leaders will be known as Ngā Manu Aorere

Further leadership opportunities are available to all students through the student service groups which are named Ngā Rōpu Taurima. Students can join any group they are interested in contributing to. All students will have leadership opportunities within these groups and will be known as Kaihautū.
The groups offered this year are:
Hauora                Health and Well-Being   
Taiao                   Environment  
Hapori                 Community 
Ahurea                Culture
Hākinakina          Sport    
Ngā Mahi Toi       Arts   
Mātauranga         Academic
Mana Motuhake  Māori Council
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