
Flood-hit school furious with 'crazy' timing of ERO evaluation
Nuhaka School has flooded twice since February 2023, and while it waits for the entire school to be rebuilt, the more than 100 students have been taking their lessons at a nearby Mormon Church.
Last week, as the school was packing up to move back to its new buildings, ERO conducted a review.
The Education Review Office (ERO) has admitted to RNZ that it got it wrong, and apologised to Nuhaka School about the timing of its review.
A school in flux
ADVERTISEMENT
From the outside, it looks like a regular church, but step through the doors and every room is crammed with school tables and chairs, whiteboards and stationery supplies. The floor is covered in colourful blue mats and among the boxes of sporting trophies and rows of school bags hanging on the wall, framed paintings of Jesus peer out.
The Mormon church where children have been going to school. (Source: rnz.co.nz)
As children help carry boxes out to the moving truck, Principal Raelene McFarlane tells RNZ how hard the past couple of years have been, and the struggle to get more resources.
"This has just been a fight. It didn't need to be this hard. I didn't need to lose staff through burnout," she said.
For most of the past 2.5 years, the students have been learning in makeshift classrooms - using the hall stage, offices, and meeting rooms to try and regain some sense of normalcy for the kids.
"The crowding is huge. It got quite heartbreaking at times when we had kids who had to crawl under tables to get out to the loo and you know, and if they didn't make it that was really upsetting for them, it was upsetting for staff and whanau.
"Without space you can't teach a quiet group, because the noise is just really compacted," said McFarlane.
ADVERTISEMENT
Nuhaka School principal Raelene McFarlane. (Source: rnz.co.nz)
She said they were just weeks away from moving back into their newly rebuilt school site, when the Education Review Office, known as ERO, decided it was time to conduct a review.
McFarlane begged them to delay it by 10 weeks, so they would be settled back in their school buildings, but told RNZ that ERO would only shift the review by three weeks, to the last few days of term when they were still in the church.
"When I contacted them and said 'we are literally going to have boxes walking out the door, we can't even do a lesson for you, that's crazy'. We were just told that they'll be sensitive and that it was going ahead," she said.
Wairoa mayor Craig Little. (Source: rnz.co.nz)
The local iwi and mayor also tried to get the ERO review moved, but mayor Craig Little said he was astonished when ERO went ahead with its inspection.
"These kids have absolutely gone through hell and back. And so now they're moving finally, thank God for the Mormon church. They've been in there and they're moving back to their school. But it's really hard and would you believe let's chuck an ERO report the same time they're moving.
ADVERTISEMENT
"It's just crazy. I've been on school boards and the ERO report is the biggest thing that can disrupt your school ever. And you get one shot at it and everybody is under stress. ERO should be saying, 'hey, let's just sort of forget about that at the moment'," said Craig.
Instead, ERO visited the school last week while it was still operating out of the church buildings.
"At least come and see us in the right place — do the right compliance checks on the right buildings — that would make more sense to me.
"We don't understand, we feel pretty much... we don't know if it's targeted," said McFarlane.
'We got this one wrong' — ERO apologises
ERO declined RNZ's request for an interview, but spokesperson Shelley Booysen told RNZ that where possible, it did its best to be flexible to meet the needs of schools.
"In this case, the School Review team made the decision to go ahead with the review following a number of rescheduled dates.
ADVERTISEMENT
"In hindsight, the school's request for an extension during their move and until they are more settled into their new building was not unreasonable. We should have delayed the review. We got this one wrong and we sincerely apologise to the school and the community," she said.
ERO said it wished Nuhaka School 'all the best' in their new school building.
But Little worried the damage was already done.
"Why would you do that to people? I'm getting calls from the parents, not only the school teachers, just saying 'hey, we're really worried about what's happening here'.
"These teachers have been enough stress. Let's not put them under anymore," he said.
Nuhaka School will reopen on July 14 for the first day of the new term.
Nuhaka School students. (Source: rnz.co.nz)
ADVERTISEMENT
rnz.co.nz

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

1News
a day ago
- 1News
Flood-hit school furious with 'crazy' timing of ERO evaluation
A primary school in Wairoa that was ruined in Cyclone Gabrielle and has been operating out of a temporary site is furious and frustrated with the Education Review Office over the timing of its evaluation. Nuhaka School has flooded twice since February 2023, and while it waits for the entire school to be rebuilt, the more than 100 students have been taking their lessons at a nearby Mormon Church. Last week, as the school was packing up to move back to its new buildings, ERO conducted a review. The Education Review Office (ERO) has admitted to RNZ that it got it wrong, and apologised to Nuhaka School about the timing of its review. A school in flux ADVERTISEMENT From the outside, it looks like a regular church, but step through the doors and every room is crammed with school tables and chairs, whiteboards and stationery supplies. The floor is covered in colourful blue mats and among the boxes of sporting trophies and rows of school bags hanging on the wall, framed paintings of Jesus peer out. The Mormon church where children have been going to school. (Source: As children help carry boxes out to the moving truck, Principal Raelene McFarlane tells RNZ how hard the past couple of years have been, and the struggle to get more resources. "This has just been a fight. It didn't need to be this hard. I didn't need to lose staff through burnout," she said. For most of the past 2.5 years, the students have been learning in makeshift classrooms - using the hall stage, offices, and meeting rooms to try and regain some sense of normalcy for the kids. "The crowding is huge. It got quite heartbreaking at times when we had kids who had to crawl under tables to get out to the loo and you know, and if they didn't make it that was really upsetting for them, it was upsetting for staff and whanau. "Without space you can't teach a quiet group, because the noise is just really compacted," said McFarlane. ADVERTISEMENT Nuhaka School principal Raelene McFarlane. (Source: She said they were just weeks away from moving back into their newly rebuilt school site, when the Education Review Office, known as ERO, decided it was time to conduct a review. McFarlane begged them to delay it by 10 weeks, so they would be settled back in their school buildings, but told RNZ that ERO would only shift the review by three weeks, to the last few days of term when they were still in the church. "When I contacted them and said 'we are literally going to have boxes walking out the door, we can't even do a lesson for you, that's crazy'. We were just told that they'll be sensitive and that it was going ahead," she said. Wairoa mayor Craig Little. (Source: The local iwi and mayor also tried to get the ERO review moved, but mayor Craig Little said he was astonished when ERO went ahead with its inspection. "These kids have absolutely gone through hell and back. And so now they're moving finally, thank God for the Mormon church. They've been in there and they're moving back to their school. But it's really hard and would you believe let's chuck an ERO report the same time they're moving. ADVERTISEMENT "It's just crazy. I've been on school boards and the ERO report is the biggest thing that can disrupt your school ever. And you get one shot at it and everybody is under stress. ERO should be saying, 'hey, let's just sort of forget about that at the moment'," said Craig. Instead, ERO visited the school last week while it was still operating out of the church buildings. "At least come and see us in the right place — do the right compliance checks on the right buildings — that would make more sense to me. "We don't understand, we feel pretty much... we don't know if it's targeted," said McFarlane. 'We got this one wrong' — ERO apologises ERO declined RNZ's request for an interview, but spokesperson Shelley Booysen told RNZ that where possible, it did its best to be flexible to meet the needs of schools. "In this case, the School Review team made the decision to go ahead with the review following a number of rescheduled dates. ADVERTISEMENT "In hindsight, the school's request for an extension during their move and until they are more settled into their new building was not unreasonable. We should have delayed the review. We got this one wrong and we sincerely apologise to the school and the community," she said. ERO said it wished Nuhaka School 'all the best' in their new school building. But Little worried the damage was already done. "Why would you do that to people? I'm getting calls from the parents, not only the school teachers, just saying 'hey, we're really worried about what's happening here'. "These teachers have been enough stress. Let's not put them under anymore," he said. Nuhaka School will reopen on July 14 for the first day of the new term. Nuhaka School students. (Source: ADVERTISEMENT


Otago Daily Times
a day ago
- Otago Daily Times
Gloriavale school fails second ERO audit
A private school run by the Gloriavale Christian community has failed an audit for the second time in as many years. The Education Review Office said in a report published on Wednesday that its review visit at the end of 2024 found the school had improved since a 2023 review, but it still failed three of eight registration criteria. It said the school did not provide suitable staffing for students with complex additional needs, suitable equipment for students with complex additional needs, or a physically and emotionally safe space. "At the time of the ERO onsite review phase, the school was supporting an enrolled student with extremely high and very complex needs that impact on full onsite engagement within the classroom," the report said. "An overarching goal of supporting full attendance and achievement at school is in place within the limitations of the school's isolation, the wishes of family and the severity of the complex needs." It said enrolled students with high and complex needs could not attend because there was insufficient equipment to support those needs. The report said about 40% of the 224 school-aged children in the Gloriavale community attended the school, while about half were home-schooled and the remainder were enrolled with Te Kura (formerly the Correspondence School). "Education provision in the Gloriavale Christian School is slowly improving. The school board and staff have worked extensively with board-contracted external support and Ministry of Education advice and guidance to develop capacity to provide high quality learning and teaching," the report said. The report said most children in home-schooling were taught "at least as regularly and well as in a registered school" and students studying through Te Kura felt well supported. The community's preschool was working towards fully implementing quality systems, processes and practices to enable the delivery of a responsive curriculum for all children. However, the report said "access to education across the community is inequitable" and course and NCEA choices were limited. "ERO is not yet assured that all learners' physical and emotional health and safety is closely, regularly and sufficiently considered and monitored across all schooling provisions. The inconsistent application of some policies and procedures poses risk to children given a history of unsafe practices within the Gloriavale community," the report said. It said the Teaching Council was investigating an allegation of staff misconduct and the school had been instructed to formally monitor the staff member.

RNZ News
a day ago
- RNZ News
Gloriavale school fails second ERO audit
The Gloriavale compound on the West Coast. Photo: RNZ / Jean Edwards A private school run by the Gloriavale Christian community has failed an audit for the second time in as many years . The Education Review Office said in a report published on Wednesday that its review visit at the end of 2024 found the school had improved since a 2023 review , but it still failed three of eight registration criteria. It said the school did not provide suitable staffing for students with complex additional needs, suitable equipment for students with complex additional needs, or a physically and emotionally safe space. "At the time of the ERO onsite review phase, the school was supporting an enrolled student with extremely high and very complex needs that impact on full onsite engagement within the classroom," the report said. "An overarching goal of supporting full attendance and achievement at school is in place within the limitations of the school's isolation, the wishes of family and the severity of the complex needs." It said enrolled students with high and complex needs could not attend because there was insufficient equipment to support those needs. The report said about 40 percent of the 224 school-aged children in the Gloriavale community attended the school, while about half were home-schooled and the remainder were enrolled with Te Kura (formerly the Correspondence School). "Education provision in the Gloriavale Christian School is slowly improving. The school board and staff have worked extensively with board-contracted external support and Ministry of Education advice and guidance to develop capacity to provide high quality learning and teaching," the report said. The report said most children in home-schooling were taught "at least as regularly and well as in a registered school" and students studying through Te Kura felt well supported. The community's preschool was working towards fully implementing quality systems, processes and practices to enable the delivery of a responsive curriculum for all children. However, the report said "access to education across the community is inequitable" and course and NCEA choices were limited. "ERO is not yet assured that all learners' physical and emotional health and safety is closely, regularly and sufficiently considered and monitored across all schooling provisions. The inconsistent application of some policies and procedures poses risk to children given a history of unsafe practices within the Gloriavale community," the report said. It said the Teaching Council was investigating an allegation of staff misconduct and the school had been instructed to formally monitor the staff member. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.