List_of_schools_in_the_Auckland_Region

List of schools in the Auckland Region

List of schools in the Auckland Region

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The Auckland Region is the most populous region of New Zealand, containing the country's most populous city, Auckland, as well the towns of Wellsford, Warkworth, Helensville, the Hibiscus Coast, Pukekohe and Waiuku and their surrounding rural areas, plus many islands in the Hauraki Gulf including Waiheke Island and Great Barrier Island. It contains a few small rural primary schools, some small town primary and secondary schools, and a large number of city schools. As of June 2011, there are 538 primary and secondary schools in Auckland, enrolling over 267,000 students.[1]

Auckland Grammar School

In New Zealand schools, students begin formal education in Year 1 at the age of five.[2] Year 13 is the traditional final year of secondary education, although students are entitled to stay in secondary school until the end of the calendar year of their 19th birthday if need be. The list of schools below is broken up into primary and intermediate schools, which includes contributing primary schools (Years 1–6), full primary schools (Years 1–8), and intermediate schools (Years 7 and 8); secondary schools, which includes normal secondary schools (Years 9-13), secondary schools with intermediate (Years 7–13), junior secondary schools (Years 7–10) and senior secondary schools (Years 11–13); composite schools (Years 1–13); and special schools and teen parent units. Primary and intermediate schools are further broken up into the local board of the Auckland Council in which each school is located.

State schools are those fully funded by the government and at which no fees for tuition of domestic students (i.e. New Zealand citizens and permanent residents, and Australian citizens) can be charged, although a donation is commonly requested.[3] A state integrated school is a former private school with a special character based on a religious or philosophical belief that has been integrated into the state system. State integrated schools charge "attendance dues" to cover the building and maintenance of school buildings, which are not owned by the government, but otherwise they like state schools cannot charge fees for tuition of domestic students but may request a donation. Private schools charge fees to its students for tuition, as do state and state integrated schools for tuition of international students.[4]

The socioeconomic decile indicates the socioeconomic status of the school's catchment area. A decile of 1 indicates the school draws from a poor area; a decile of 10 indicates the school draws from a well-off area.[5] The decile ratings used here come from the Ministry of Education Te Kete Ipurangi website and from the decile change spreadsheet listed in the references. The deciles were last revised using information from the 2006 census.[6] The roll of each school changes frequently as students start school for the first time, move between schools, and graduate. The rolls given here are those provided by the Ministry of Education, and are based on figures from February 2024.[7] The Ministry of Education institution number links to the Education Counts page for each school.

Primary and intermediate schools

Unless otherwise stated, all primary and intermediate schools in the Auckland region are coeducational.

Rodney

More information Name, MOE ...

Hibiscus and Bays

More information Name, MOE ...

Upper Harbour

More information Name, MOE ...

Kaipatiki

Devonport–Takapuna

More information Name, MOE ...

Henderson–Massey

More information Name, MOE ...

Waitākere Ranges

More information Name, MOE ...

Great Barrier

More information Name, MOE ...

Waiheke

More information Name, MOE ...

Waitematā

The Waitematā local board is the central-most Auckland board, covering the Auckland central business district and several adjacent suburbs, including Freemans Bay, Grey Lynn, Grafton, Herne Bay, Newmarket, Newton, Parnell, Ponsonby and Westmere.

More information Name, MOE ...

Whau

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Albert–Eden

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Puketapapa

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Ōrākei

More information Name, Years ...

Maungakiekie–Tāmaki

The Maungakiekie–Tāmaki local board covers the south-eastern part of the Auckland isthmus. Major suburbs include Glen Innes, Mount Wellington, Onehunga, Panmure, Penrose, Point England, and parts of Royal Oak.

More information Name, Years ...

Howick

More information Name, MOE ...

Māngere–Ōtāhuhu

More information Name, MOE ...

Otara–Papatoetoe

More information Name, MOE ...

Manurewa

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Papakura

More information Name, MOE ...

Franklin

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Secondary schools

More information Name, MOE ...

Composite schools

More information Name, MOE ...

Special schools and teen parent units

More information Name, Type ...

Closed schools

More information Name, Years ...
  • Kelston High School – opened 1954, became Kelston Girls High School (later College) in 1963 after Kelston Boys' High School opened
  • Westlake High School – opened 1958, became Westlake Girls High School in 1962 after Westlake Boys High School opened.[22]

References

  1. "New Zealand Schools - Education Counts". Ministry of Education (New Zealand). Retrieved 12 January 2013.
  2. "About School: School basics". New Zealand Ministry of Education. Archived from the original on 26 May 2008. Retrieved 8 June 2008.
  3. "School Fees". New Zealand Government. 31 October 2016.
  4. "about NZ education". EduSearch. Archived from the original on 6 December 2007. Retrieved 8 June 2008.
  5. "New Zealand Schools Directory". New Zealand Ministry of Education. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
  6. "School Mergers, Closures and New Schools - Education Counts". Ministry of Education. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
  7. Parata, Hekia (3 March 2017). "Three new primary schools to open in 2019". New Zealand Government. Retrieved 4 March 2016.
  8. "School Mergers, Closures and New Schools – 2015 tables". Ministry of Education. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  9. Parata, Hekia (22 July 2015). "New School Establishment Notice – Takanini New School #1". New Zealand Gazette. 2015 (6). New Zealand Government: 120. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  10. Boys only Years 9–11, coeducational years 12–15
  11. Parata, Hekia (31 July 2014). "New School Establishment Notice – Ormiston Junior College". New Zealand Gazette. 2014 (82). New Zealand Government: 2259. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  12. TKI gives the range as 7–15, but the school website says 9–15, and the ERO 2007 report doesn't mention years 7 and 8 apart from a mention in the "school type" field.
  13. School is now fully Coed
  14. Teen Parent Unit rolls are returned with their host school. These are James Cook High School for the Clendon TPU, Auckland Girls' Grammar School for Eden Campus TPU, Henderson High School for He Wero o nga Wahine, and Tangaroa College for Tangaroa TPU.
  15. Sparks, Zizi (17 February 2017). "Former Westlake High School students celebrate 60-year reunion". North Shore Times.

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