Huntly College

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Huntly College
Address
Bridge Street,
Huntly,
New Zealand
Coordinates37°33′44″S 175°09′10″E / 37.5623°S 175.1528°E / -37.5623; 175.1528Coordinates: 37°33′44″S 175°09′10″E / 37.5623°S 175.1528°E / -37.5623; 175.1528
Information
TypeState, Co-educational, Secondary Years 9-13
MottoMāori: Ma te pono ka watea
"The truth shall set you free"
Established1953
Ministry of Education Institution no.119
PrincipalBarbara Cavanagh
School roll230[1] (November 2021)
Socio-economic decile1B[2]
Websitehuntlycollege.school.nz

Huntly College is a state-owned school located in the Waikato, New Zealand town of Huntly.[3]

The wide variety of programmes available recognises the differing abilities and needs of those attending the school, and ensures that all students have the chance to succeed at their own level and in their chosen field.

Huntly College is a small school, with a current roll of approximately 350 students. The roll peaked in the early 1980s with student numbers at that time in excess of 800. This number was associated with the development of the Huntly Power Station and the operation of several state-owned coal mines. By 1991 the roll had dropped to around 500 students, and has continued to decline. The small nature of the current roll allows the school to offer small class sizes. The ages range from Year 9 - Year 13.

The area is home to its original inhabitants, the Tainui people, to whom the Waikato River and Taupiri Mountain are sacred. Huntly College roll is 72% Maori. Students participate in camps, trips, extra curricular activities (drama, dance, kapa haka) and a range of sports. Huntly College is close to two major New Zealand cities, Hamilton 35 km to the south and Auckland, New Zealand's largest city (population of over one million), is approximately 90 km north. The college is also less than one hour's drive to either the west or east coasts.

The school's motto, "ma te pono ka watea", is a Maori translation of "the truth shall set you free". Alumni have included rugby league player Martin Moana and the Topp Twins.

The principal Tim Foy was forced to resign in 2017 and was replaced by Barbara Cavanagh.[4][5]

References[]

  1. ^ "New Zealand Schools Directory". New Zealand Ministry of Education. Retrieved 22 December 2021.
  2. ^ "Decile Change 2014 to 2015 for State & State Integrated Schools". Ministry of Education. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  3. ^ "Huntly College". www.huntlycollege.school.nz. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  4. ^ "Huntly College in crisis after principal forced to resign". Stuff. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  5. ^ "Huntly College appoints Barbara Cavanagh as new principal". Stuff. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
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