Transcript
Page 1: St Paul's Collegiate School

St Paul’sS TAT E I N F I D E

Growth through Achievement

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“There must be an inspiration,

a vision at least of greatness and, above all,

more than a glimpse of the ultimate goal of

human endeavours.”

Viscount Cobham, G.C.M.G., T.D.

Governor General of New Zealand at the laying of the foundation stone of

St Paul’s Collegiate School, May 1958.

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St Paul's is more than the sum of its parts. It is an holistic experience of personal

development where all students are given the opportunity to develop their own

individuality, to identify their aspirations and to strive to achieve them.

St Paul's sets challenges and provides a framework to learn how to confront them.

It offers personal growth through achievement and spiritual formation. It provides pastoral

care during a time of growth and development. It offers excitement and adventure.

St Paul's sets high academic standards for its students and it expects them to be met. Life at St Paul's is

all-encompassing, for boarders and day students alike. All students are immersed in activities and programmes which

develop their spiritual, physical and emotional well-being as well as their intellectual and academic competencies.

But most of all St Paul's offers traditional values - the precepts upon which to build a good and worthwhile life.

The School aims to inspire its students to reach beyond their own personal boundaries and find the rewards

which come from facing new experiences, meeting individual challenges and giving and receiving support

and companionship.

G. J. Fenton

Headmaster

St Paul’s

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In 1831, Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote: “If men could learn from history, what lessons it

might teach us! But ... the light which experience gives us is a lantern on the stern, which

shines only on the waves behind us.”

At St Paul’s, we believe in using the lessons of history to light the way ahead. The School has

taken the strengths of the past and placed them in a modern and forward-looking setting, to prepare

today’s young people for their place in tomorrow’s world. St Paul’s heritage of success demonstrates

that caring and supportive conditions bring out the best in people. To this end, the School provides an orderly, safe,

non-threatening environment in which students can face their daily challenges and develop to their full potential.

All day and boarding students are fully engaged in the life of the School and their contribution is carefully

monitored to help develop a sense of mutual trust and achievement. The routine requirements of academic and

School life, combined with the wide range of pursuits and activities available to students, ensure that the School

day at St Paul's begins early and ends late. This strong student commitment contributes to the sense of shared

responsibility which is a key concept at St Paul’s. The School's carefully structured environment and support

network helps individual students to meet the expectations of the School, their peers and their family.

The Old Collegians provide another strong support network for St Paul's students. Past students and their families

are always welcome at the School - both as valued members of the extended School family and as inspiration for

current students, who gain extra motivation from seeing how others have benefited from the St Paul's experience.

St Paul’sA sense of community

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St Paul’s

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A ‘home’ for every student

Central to the social structure of the School is the House system. All students belong to one of nine

Houses in the School - four boarding and five day Houses. Each House is an extended family

of staff and students, all known to each other, who share bonds of duty, loyalty and

friendship. Students normally remain in the same House throughout their time at

St Paul's, as it becomes the focus of their social and support network.

At the heart of St Paul's is the new Student Centre - the Turangawaewae or ‘community

heartbeat’ of the School. The five day students' Houses are located in the Student Centre,

giving these students the opportunity to take time out from their daily commitments to be in

a place they can call their own. The Centre also features a large, well-appointed seminar room,

along with the Careers Advisory Centre, the School Shop and the Administration Offices.

Through the House system the School provides a ‘home’ for every student - a place where

they can each access the support and guidance of teachers and their peers.

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St Paul’sThe spirit of boarding

Boarding at St Paul’s is a highly rewarding experience. Each House has its own character and style which

has evolved over the years. The House is the focal point of life for boarding students.

Each boys’ House takes up to 75 students with 15 from each of the year groups. Each House has a senior and

assistant housemaster, two resident tutors and a matron. Year 9 and Year 10 boys share 8-bed dorms,

Year 11 boys have 3-bed dorms, Year 12 boys have 2-bed dorms with their own study and Year 13 boys have

their own rooms.

Harington House, the girls’ boarding House, is structured to meet the needs of senior female students.

The senior girls at St Paul’s have the opportunity to work and achieve across the various School disciplines,

both within their House environment and within the predominantly male student community. The two years

at St Paul’s are designed to give them the confidence and life skills to make an effective transition

from School to university and beyond.

All boarding students have two hours of homework every weeknight which is

supervised by a staff member and a prefect. Individual assistance and tuition is available

while students are helped to develop their own problem-solving abilities. Each House has

a fully equipped computer room with a number of computers, printers and educational

software, to help students prepare homework and assignments. E-mail and internet access

is also available to encourage students to stay in touch with distant family and friends.

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The Chapel of Christ the King plays a central and important role in the corporate life of St Paul’s.

The School meets in chapel each day for either an assembly or for worship. Cultural events and

performances are also held in this fine building making full use of the world class organ and concert piano.

St Paul’s was founded on the values and conventions of the Anglican Church but spiritual life is sensitive

to the diverse backgrounds of the students. A feature of our School is that students have always been

encouraged to participate in chapel life and many students will, at some time, be involved in planning

and taking a chapel service which will include giving sermons. The chapel furniture was made by

students in 1967 and today’s students are making their contribution by painting new murals.

Both in the chapel and classroom programmes the emphasis is to help students make faith connections

with the day to day activities of life. The Year 10 programme, for example, connects and relates the

rich and unique Tihoi experience to our Christian journey. Every endeavour is made to assist students to

learn to ‘stand firm in the faith’ which is what our School motto State in Fide means.

Throughout the year a variety of special services are held for the School community which include the

Founders Service and The Confirmation Service. Each House also has a number of special services that

parents are especially invited to. Sunday evening services are boarders’ services and parents and friends

of the School are welcome at these services.

St Paul’sFirm in the faith

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St Paul’sGrowth through education

St Paul’s strives to prepare students to take their place confidently and successfully in society, with the prospect

of a happy and rewarding future. Academic achievement is vital to that preparation. St Paul’s provides a teaching

and learning environment which encourages students to achieve their best.

St Paul’s students have a fine academic record. Their results have been most impressive. In most years over

90 per cent of students who sit external examinations pass them. Year 13 students are consistently successful in

the University Bursary examination. More than 80 per cent regularly achieve a Scholarship or an

‘A’ or ‘B’ Bursary pass. The students at St Paul’s recognise the opportunity they have been given and understand

the responsibility placed on them to make the most of that opportunity.

The school provides a learning environment in which students set and attain personal goals. Students are taught by

outstanding teachers in modern high-quality facilities. Small classes, a carefully structured academic

programme and highly trained teachers mean the School can build up a clear profile of the

abilities and needs of each student and adjust curriculum delivery to suit the individual.

Great care is taken to ensure that parents and students are involved in planning courses

of study. Career profiling programmes ensure that students can identify and take courses

which will help them towards attaining entry to their chosen career.

Through the pursuit of academic excellence, St Paul’s helps all students extend their personal

academic boundaries and then achieve results above and beyond them.

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Learning for Life

St Paul’s seeks to bridge the traditional values of education with the realities of preparing

its students for success in their world of tomorrow. A philosophy of low class size, staff

accountability and a clear focus on individual learning underpins all instruction.

The expectations of parents and students regarding curriculum delivery are taken into

account by all teachers at St Paul’s. Class sizes are restricted. Senior classes have no more

than 20 students, lower-band junior classes no more than 20 students and all other

classes no more than 25 students.

As an independent School St Paul’s has the flexibility to go beyond the normal syllabus

requirements to extend its students in a variety of ways. Homework (or ‘prep’) is set each day

and students are expected to complete all set work on time and to the appropriate standard.

Curriculum delivery is geared to suit the needs of the individual as well as the group.

A learning resources unit provides individual assistance for those who experience specific

learning difficulties and for gifted children.

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TihoiA School with a difference

Tihoi is a campus of St Paul’s - with a difference. It is a remote community of the School set in rugged bush

on the western side of Lake Taupo. Here, 150km away from the cultivated, parklike surroundings of ‘the home

school’, is an environment with a different challenge.

Tihoi is a Venture School. It is based on the philosophy of ‘character development through adventure’

developed by educationist Kurt Hahn. At Tihoi, students get ‘back to basics’ in order to learn more about

others and about themselves.

Through Tihoi, St Paul’s is committed to accelerating the social development of students. Building the qualities

of self-esteem and personal motivation, developing the ability to meet challenges and learning to work with

others to achieve common goals are all part of the Tihoi experience.

Year 10 students are the most common Tihoi residents, spending half their School year there;

however, the Venture School is used by St Paul’s for a variety of student groups and

purposes. Senior students attend leadership courses. Girls attend an adventure camp at

the beginning of each year. Students participating in the Duke of Edinburgh scheme

have the perfect place to train. Whatever the purpose of the visit, Tihoi always provides

students with extra challenges and inspiration. Combining modern teaching methods

with an extended period of life in the outdoors makes Tihoi and St Paul’s unique.

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The principal Tihoi experience for most St Paul’s students is an 18-week residential course during

Year 10. For half their academic year these students live in austere house which were formerly

part of a timber mill. Here they learn to live and work together with their fellow House

members, taking responsibility for their own housekeeping, preparing their own meals on

a wood-burning stove and meeting a range of personal and social challenges.

Outdoor pursuits at Tihoi include kayaking, sailing, rock climbing, mountain craft, caving,

bush survival, tramping, solo and abseiling. Encouraging improved individual fitness in every

student is a primary goal for Tihoi’s instructors.

Students learn from the environment they live in. While the focus at Tihoi is on outdoors experience,

the students continue to pursue an academic programme in all mainstream subjects. The Tihoi

experience teaches students to bring the positive lessons they learn outdoors into the

classroom and vice versa. Students are challenged to extend their limits and achieve

personal and shared goals in a positive, stimulating, safe and supportive environment.

Tihoi’s full-time staff are teachers who have had extensive additional training in

supervising outdoor pursuits programmes and first aid.

Tihoi

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Growth through adventure

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At the Tihoi Venture School students learn to appreciate the greatness of the outdoors

and relate their experiences to everyday life.

Over the years, Year 10 boys at St Paul’s have faced the test of Tihoi.

Whatever their abilities and competencies, they have returned enriched and empowered.

They have learned to face and overcome new challenges, to work with others towards shared

goals and to extend their own personal boundaries beyond what they might ever have imagined.

The Tihoi experience lasts a lifetime. The camaraderie, the adventure, the skills, the fun and

the responsibilities of living in close quarters with a large number of others, create bonds

of friendship and memories of a unique experience which never fade.

At Tihoi there is competition, but there are no losers.

Here everybody succeeds.

TihoiThe Tihoi result

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...rock climbing“to reach great heights you must

be able to overcome difficult obstacles.”

...kayaking“you don’t have to go with the flow

(eddies); sometimes going with the flowcan get you into trouble (waterfalls).”

...caving“there are lots of challenges you must face

even though you can’t see the light at the end just yet.”

...sailing“my life has goals; it’s just like doing thingsI don’t want to in sailing so I can make it

to a special bay.”

...solo“I knew I had to last it because if

I couldn’t overcome a difficulty, some timelater in life a similar difficulty would come

up and I would have wished I’d pulled through.”

....tramping“people say they can’t wait till the end

of the tramp, but when they get there theyfeel like turning back and doing it again.

It’s just like life.”

Year 10 students’ reflect on their

Tihoi experience.

Life is like....

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Creativity, as an essential part of learning and development, is strongly encouraged at St Paul’s. The creative

achievements of past and present students are part of the fabric of the School; the altar, prayer desks and candle

sticks in the chapel were made by students as were the stunning religious murals. Many former teachers and

students have left their beautiful creations as gifts to the School.

All endeavours, individual or collective, are distinguished by creativity and it is through the fine arts,

the performing arts and technology that creative skills are developed. St Paul’s encourages students in

creative expression both within the core curriculum and through a wide variety of co-curricular activities

which cover these areas of learning.

Facilities for creative expression are already excellent and include; a technology block with a well-equipped

woodwork shop, a metalwork room, a design and technology facility and an artroom.

However, the projects of young artists frequently extend into the unusual, so the School

will always aim to seek out new creative learning experiences for students who express

an interest in a particular project, no matter how fanciful.

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St Paul’sGrowth through creativity

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Music is an integral part of many aspects of School life - educational, social, spiritual and

artistic. The study and appreciation of music aids learning by developing skills such

as listening with care, understanding themes and performing with confidence.

Musical ability is strongly supported within the curriculum, the House system and

through annual events like the School music festival.

The School has a number of resident groups which span the spectrum of musical styles. The orchestra

specialises in classical music, the big band focuses on jazz, the concert band plays easy listening music and

the choir leads the chapel services. Several rock bands are also active and have demonstrated

considerable success in regional competitions.

The School has a number of fine instruments, notably the chapel organ, the grand piano

and the harpsichord. The School’s Director of Music ensures that students have the

opportunity to develop their talents to the fullest extent whatever their choice of

instrument or musical appreciation.

The dramatic arts also play a significant role in School life. From junior drama classes to

public speaking and debating all the way to performance in School plays, students are given

opportunities to develop their presentation and performance skills to whatever level they aspire.

St Paul’s

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Music and the arts

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Learning through sports

It is natural that St Paul’s, an independent School with a sense of tradition, places a strong emphasis on

sport as an integral part of the all-round development of its students. The concepts of teamwork,

fitness, personal discipline and competition are all essential ingredients for the world of

tomorrow and as such, they are fostered at St Paul’s.

For most students, School sport provides the opportunity to release some study stresses

through physical activity and to enjoy fitness and companionship. However, in the growing

climate of professionalism in sport, there are many potentially highly rewarding career

options including coaching, sports administration, sport development, sports medicine and

for the talented few, involvement at a high level.

The School has a focus on sporting excellence in both training and competition. It has a number

of coaches who are graded to the very highest level of training. Motivational and coaching

sessions with visiting sports heroes are highlights of the School calendar.

The positive inspiration and enthusiasm which these professionals impart to students

during their developmental years have clear benefits for students of all ages and abilities.

Sport plays an important part in the recreational and social life of St Paul’s. School spirit

is always highly evident on School sports days. Our excellent record in sport gives the whole

School a positive sense of collective achievement and pride.

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St Paul’s... to glimpse the ultimate goal

During their time at St Paul’s all students will be exposed to personal challenges -

physical, spiritual and intellectual.

All students will be encouraged to give more than they feel capable of giving,

to do more than they feel capable of doing.

But it is through that encouragement - and with the support of staff, students and their

families - that all students will succeed in breaking through their own personal boundaries.

In doing so they will come to recognise their true potential. In helping others to do the same, they will

come to recognise greater potential in others.

At St Paul’s, students come to see the mighty oak within the acorn and, just as importantly,

they learn how to help it grow.

It is this lesson more than anything else which is the defining essence of

St Paul’s Collegiate: every individual has unlimited potential which can only

be unlocked with the support and understanding of others.

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stand firm in the faith

Further information on the curriculum and courses available at St Paul’s Collegiate

is available from the School. A schedule of fees and expenses is also available.

The Headmaster can be contacted by prospective parents

and will be available to meet them and their child or children at any convenient time.

For inquiries contact:

St Paul’s Collegiate, Private Bag 3069 , Hamilton, New Zealand.

Telephone: 07 957 8899, (International: +64 7 957 8899), Facsimile: 07 957 8833, Website: www.stpauls.school.nz


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