Kuranui College | |
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Address | |
Coordinates | 41°05′30″S 175°27′00″E / 41.0916°S 175.4501°E |
Information | |
Other name | KC[2] |
Type | State co-educational secondary day school |
Motto | Māori: Tatau Tatau[1] (We Are All One) |
Established | 2 February 1960[3] |
Ministry of Education Institution no. | 249 |
Dean | Eleanor Leadbeater (international)[6] |
Principal | Maree Patten[5] |
Staff | 100 (2023)[7] |
Years offered | 9–13[9] |
Gender | Coeducational [10] |
School roll | 789[8] (August 2024) |
Colour(s) | Maroon, White & Blue |
Socio-economic decile | 6[11] |
Budget | NZ$6,243,183 million (31 December 2021)[4] |
Website | kuranuicollege |
Kuranui College is a state co-educational secondary day school for the South Wairarapa located in Greytown, New Zealand.[12] The college opened in February 1960 to replace the four district high schools in Greytown, Featherston, Martinborough, and Carterton.[13] The college was built in Greytown, for it was the midpoint of the towns.[14] In the midst of the post-World War II baby boom. It has been said to have as many as 900 students in the mid-1970s, but since the end of the baby boom, that number has dropped.[15]
Then Education Minister Lockwood Smith disbanded the college's Board of Trustees due to it being dysfunctional. Brian Lochore was appointed commissioner after sacking of the board of trustees in 1994.[16][17] Board in-fighting had reached the stage where the students rebelled, staging a lunchtime student strike.[18] In 2005, Trevor Mallard visited Kuranui College due to the Wairarapa schools project, WELCom. He first announced the project at Kuranui College. The project aims to establish a 'virtual' secondary school community for the Tararua and Wairarapa region using broadband.[19] Kuranui is one of 15 rural secondary schools in New Zealand with agricultural subjects in their curriculum.[20] Kuranui is a busload college with over eighty per cent of the students who go to college travel to and from school daily by bus.[21]
The college serves Years 9 to 13; the college has a roll of 789 students as of August 2024.[8]