Kelston Deaf Education Centre

Last updated

Kelston Deaf Education Centre
Address
Kelston Deaf Education Centre
3 Archibald Road, New Lynn, Auckland
Coordinates 36°54′20″S174°39′56″E / 36.9055°S 174.6656°E / -36.9055; 174.6656 Coordinates: 36°54′20″S174°39′56″E / 36.9055°S 174.6656°E / -36.9055; 174.6656
Information
TypeState co-ed special school with boarding facilities
Established1958
Ministry of Education Institution no. 503
PrincipalDavid Foster
Head of SchoolTom Purvis and Christine Miller
School roll [1] (March 2021)
Socio-economic decile3
Website www.kdec.school.nz

Kelston Deaf Education Centre is located in Archibald Road, New Lynn, Auckland, New Zealand. It is a residential special school for deaf children, as well as a resource centre providing services and support for mainstream students and their teachers in the Upper North Island (north of and including Taupo).

The Kelston School for the Deaf was established in 1958. It changed its name to Kelston Deaf Education Centre in 1991 to better reflect the wide range of services it provided. [2] At the start of the third term of 2020 the school merged with the Van Asch Deaf Education Centre to form Ko Taku Reo, a national school for Deaf Education.

Related Research Articles

Māori language Polynesian language spoken in New Zealand

Māori, also known as te reo, is an Eastern Polynesian language spoken by the Māori people, the indigenous population of New Zealand. Closely related to Cook Islands Māori, Tuamotuan, and Tahitian, it gained recognition as one of New Zealand's official languages in 1987. The number of speakers of the language has declined sharply since 1945, but a Māori-language revitalisation effort has slowed the decline.

Sumner, New Zealand Suburb of Christchurch in Christchurch City Council, New Zealand

Sumner is a coastal seaside suburb of Christchurch, New Zealand and was surveyed and named in 1849 in honour of John Bird Sumner, the then newly appointed Archbishop of Canterbury and president of the Canterbury Association. Originally a separate borough, it was amalgamated with the city of Christchurch as communications improved and the economies of scale made small town boroughs uneconomic to operate.

The Māori language revival is a movement to promote, reinforce and strengthen the use of te reo Māori, the Māori language. Primarily in New Zealand, but also in places with large numbers of expatriate New Zealanders, the movement aims to increase the use of Māori in the home, in education, government and business. The movement is part of a broader Māori renaissance.

New Zealand Sign Language or NZSL is the main language of the deaf community in New Zealand. It became an official language of New Zealand in April 2006 under the New Zealand Sign Language Act 2006. The purpose of the act was to create rights and obligations in the use of NZSL throughout the legal system and to ensure that the Deaf community had the same access to government information and services as everybody else. According to the 2013 Census, over 20,000 New Zealanders speak NZSL.

New Lynn Suburb of Auckland Council in New Zealand

New Lynn is a residential suburb in Auckland, New Zealand.

Van Asch College State, co-educational special school

Van Asch Deaf Education Centre was located in Truro Street, Sumner, Christchurch, New Zealand. It was a special school for deaf children, accepting both day and residential pupils, as well being as a resource centre providing services and support for parents, mainstream students and their teachers in the South Island and the Lower North Island.

Cook Islands Māori is an Eastern Polynesian language that is the official language of the Cook Islands. Cook Islands Māori is closely related to New Zealand Māori, but is a distinct language in its own right. Cook Islands Māori is simply called Māori when there is no need to disambiguate it from New Zealand Māori, but it is also known as Māori Kūki 'Āirani, or, controversially, Rarotongan. Many Cook Islanders also call it Te reo Ipukarea, literally "the language of the Ancestral Homeland".

Fruitvale Road railway station

Fruitvale Road railway station is on the Western Line of the Auckland railway network. It is near local schools, including two major high schools.

Kelston, New Zealand Suburb of Auckland Council in New Zealand

Kelston is a residential suburb of Auckland, New Zealand. Originally a ceramics manufacturing centre, the area is now mostly residential, including a number of schools. Kelston is located in, and its name has been given to, the Kelston parliamentary electorate.

Glen Eden, New Zealand Suburb of Auckland Council in New Zealand

Glen Eden is a suburb of Auckland, New Zealand. The suburb is in the Waitākere Ward, one of the thirteen administrative areas of Auckland governed by Auckland Council.

Glendene is a suburb of Auckland, New Zealand. It is under the local governance of the Auckland Council.

Kelston Boys High School School

Kelston Boys' High School ("KBHS") is an all-boys state secondary school in Kelston, a suburb in the Waitakere region of Auckland, New Zealand. It was created in 1963 when the roll of Kelston High School became too large for the site on the corner of Archibald and Gt North Rds. The boys moved to a new site further down Archibald Road, leaving the original site to be the home of Kelston Girls High School.

Carmel Sepuloni New Zealand politician

Carmel Jean Sepuloni is a New Zealand politician and a member of parliament for the Labour Party. She was first elected to Parliament following the 2008 general election as a list member, becoming New Zealand's first MP of Tongan descent. In the 2011 general election, Sepuloni won the seat of Waitakere on the official count with an eleven-vote majority over incumbent National MP Paula Bennett, who subsequently requested a judicial recount, which resulted in Sepuloni losing her seat in Parliament. She returned to Parliament in 2014 as the member for Kelston.

Iritana Tāwhiwhirangi

Dame Iritana Te Rangi Tāwhiwhirangi is a New Zealand advocate of Māori language education and the Kohanga Reo movement.

Deaf studies

Deaf studies are academic disciplines concerned with the study of the deaf social life of human groups and individuals. These constitute an interdisciplinary field that integrates contents, critiques, and methodologies from anthropology, cultural studies, economics, geography, history, political science, psychology, social studies, and sociology, among others. The field focuses on the language, culture, and lives of the deaf from the social instead of the medical perspective.

Arapera Hineira Kaa Blank was a Māori poet and teacher. She was of Ngati Porou and Ngati Kahungungu descent.

Kelston is a village in the United Kingdom. It may also refer to:

Kelston Girls’ College (KGC) is a single-sex girls state secondary school in Kelston, a suburb in the Waitakere region of Auckland, New Zealand. It was created in 1963 when the roll of Kelston High School became too large for the site on the corner of Archibald and Great North Roads. The boys moved to a new site further down Archibald Road and the original site became the home of Kelston Girls’ High School.

References

  1. "New Zealand Schools Directory". New Zealand Ministry of Education. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  2. "History of Kelston School for the Deaf". kotakureo.school.nz. Ko Taku Reo. Retrieved 28 November 2020.