Categories: News

Education stars shine in Queen’s Birthday Honours

<h2>A dozen education sector professionals have new letters after their names as recipients of Queen&&num;8217&semi;s Birthday Honours&period; <&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Teachers&comma; principals&comma; lecturers and education programme founders are among the New Zealanders to appear on this year&&num;8217&semi;s honours list for their services to education&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The following&comma; in alphabetical order&comma; are 2021 recipients of the title&comma; Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit&colon; <&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>APPLEYARD&comma; Mr David John &lpar;Dave&rpar; &&num;8211&semi; For services to education<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mr Dave Appleyard has been involved with education for 41 years and was Principal of Rata Street School in Naenae from 2002 to 2020&comma; challenging the view that a school’s decile is a proxy for quality&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mr Appleyard has overseen growth in the school’s roll and positive reviews from the Education Review Office&period; He has carefully selected charitable partnerships to match actual needs in the school&period; He was a key driver of improving internet access at the school and in Naenae homes&comma; working with the TAKA Trust to obtain laptops and broadband for his pupils&comma; and secure free wi-fi for educational use at the school through the Equitable Digital Access Project&period; He has overseen the early adoption of a flipped classroom approach to drive learning through the strengths and areas of growth of the children&period; He co-led the Naenae and Stokes Valley Kahui Ako – Community of Learning and initiated a Gifted Kids Programme one day a week &lpar;now Mindplus&rpar;&period; He represented Wellington’s schools in low socio-economic areas on the Ministry of Education’s sector advisory group to replace the decile funding system&period; Mr Appleyard co-led a research project investigating literacy skills drop-off over holiday breaks and means of prevention&comma; sharing the research with other educators nationally&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>BURT&comma; Mrs Dorothy Joy &&num;8211&semi; For services to digital learning<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mrs Dorothy Burt co-established the Manaiakalani programme in 2006&comma; which is Treaty of Waitangi-based and involves schools&comma; teachers&comma; students&comma; wh&amacr;nau and their community in a partnership enhanced by technology&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Established to accelerate academic progress and deliver digital learning outcomes in low socioeconomic communities&comma; Manaiakalani now has an outreach programme with more than 100 schools across Aotearoa&period; Since inception Mrs Burt has led the Manaiakalani education programme for schools in Auckland and the twelve outreach communities around Aotearoa&period; Research on Manaiakalani by the Woolf Fisher Research Centre has shown significant improvement in student achievement&comma; particularly in writing&period; She established the Manaiakalani Innovative Teacher Academy in 2013&comma; which has allowed groups of teachers in successive years to extend the possibilities of students through innovative solutions&period; She co-established the Digital Teacher Academy in 2014&comma; an effective induction pilot for new teachers&comma; and has since scaled this approach to a Digital Fluency Intensive programme offered to all Manaiakalani teachers&period; She has led a team training thousands of teachers in effective pedagogy for digital learning&period; This supported a seamless transition to online learning for Manaiakalani schools during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020&period; She is widely known for her work in digital learning and has presented to many conferences nationally and internationally&period; Mrs Burt’s teaching career spans primary&comma; intermediate and secondary schools&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>DODDS&comma; Mrs Margaret Ann -For services to special education<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mrs Margaret Dodds has been an active and dedicated member of Special Education New Zealand&comma; having been Team Leader of Special Education in several high schools and Principal of Waitaha Special School from 2008 to 2018&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As Principal of Waitaha&comma; Mrs Dodds was jointly responsible with the Principal of Lemonwood Grove in establishing the new Lemonwood Grove full primary and Waitaha special education schools’ side-by-side&period; She played a key role in relocating Waitaha to a new purpose-built facility in Rolleston in 2018 with four satellite provisions across four other mainstream schools&period; She ensured her students had an everyday school experience&comma; introducing new curriculum&comma; school dances&comma; camps and inter-school sports&comma; and created an innovative sensory-motor therapy room designed to meet students’ sensory needs&comma; enhance self-regulation and develop motor functions&period; She ensured that students’ best interests were the core of all decisions&comma; and had an open-door policy for staff and wh&amacr;nau&comma; ensuring they received the support&comma; resources and information available to help their students achieve&period; After retiring in 2018&comma; Mrs Dodds was called upon by the Ministry of Education on two occasions due to her leadership skills to cover primary school principal roles at short notice&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>DOWNES&comma; Dr Graeme Alexander &&num;8211&semi; For services to music and music education<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Dr Graeme Downes is a rock musician and founding member of &OpenCurlyQuote;The Verlaines’ and a former senior lecturer at the University of Otago&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Dr Downes established The Verlaines in 1981 and has been performing and recording under that name for 40 years&period; He is the songwriter&comma; vocalist and producer for the band&period; The Verlaines have released 11 albums and two EPs over this period&period; The band played in New Zealand&comma; Australia and the United States&comma; with some shows in the United Kingdom&period; The group has become an integral part of the &OpenCurlyQuote;Dunedin Sound’ and he has orchestrated three concerts of works by these bands&comma; including the Chills&comma; Clean and Straightjacket Fits under the &OpenCurlyQuote;Tally Ho’ banner&period; Outside of the band&comma; he has lectured in the Department of Music developing New Zealand’s first rock music degree&comma; before becoming Head of Department of Music in 2012&period; With a PhD on the music of Mahler&comma; he has provided pre-concert lectures for the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra and Southern Sinfonia&sol;DSO and has contributed to music programmes on Radio New Zealand&period; He provides musicologist support in the area of copyright disputes&period; Dr Downes has served as a songwriter ambassador for the Australasian Performing Right Association and the Australasian Mechanical Copyright Owners Society&comma; supporting music creators&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>ELLERY&comma; Mr Miles Denis &&num;8211&semi; For services to youth&comma; education and the community<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mr Miles Ellery has worked with at risk young people with psychological&comma; behavioural&comma; emotional and learning difficulties&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mr Ellery was Director of Edward Seager School at Sunnyside Hospital from 1979 to 1995&comma; overseeing positive results from students able to be successfully reintegrated into regular high school&comma; or into employment&comma; after completing programmes at Edward Seagar&period; He has provided leadership to several professional bodies&comma; including as Secretary at regional and national levels for New Zealand Association for Research in Education&comma; New Zealand Psychological Society&comma; and New Zealand Association of Counsellors&period; He was Chairman of Resource Teachers&colon; Learning and Behaviour &lpar;RTLB&rpar; Shirley Cluster management committee for six years&period; He was Head of Guidance at Shirley Boys High School in Christchurch for 15 years&period; He initiated and had a significant leadership role in implementing the nationwide Lions Quest Life Skills education programmes for adolescents and their families&period; He was Secretary of Quest Skills for Adolescence Board from 1986 to 1994 and chaired the New Zealand and Pacific Lions Leadership and Development programme from 1990 to 1996&period; He has been a Lions District Governor&comma; as well as Christchurch Host Lions Club past President and Secretary since 1990&period; Mr Ellery led several successful Lions fundraisers and has held roles with Scouts&comma; YMCA and church youth groups&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>FAITOTONU&comma; Mr Siale Katoa Latu Pasa&comma; JP &&num;8211&semi; For services to Pacific education<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mr Siale Faitotonu has supported Pacific children and young people in education in Christchurch for more than 30 years&comma; outside of his regular employment at the University of Canterbury &lpar;UC&rpar;&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mr Faitotonu established Fe’ungamalie Language Nest at Rowley School in 1995&comma; playing a key role in transitioning children and families of Fe’ungamalie to merge with Tongan Kaha’u Ola Early Childhood Centre in 2005&comma; ensuring this centre could continue when facing difficulties&period; He was Licensee for Kaha’u Ola until 2009&period; He initiated a new pan-Pacific ECE to serve West Christchurch following earthquake displacement of Pasifika families&comma; which opened in 2017&period; He established a Tongan language homework programme through Kahoa Tauleva Christchurch Trust in 2004&period; He facilitated resources including education students from UC and second-hand computers for the programme’s homework centres&comma; helping establish a computer skills programme for students and parents&period; He translates education material into Tongan and developed resources for non-Pasifika teachers working in ECE nationally&period; As no Christchurch school could support NCEA Lea Faka-Tonga Levels 1 through 3&comma; he established a programme for Tongan language students across 19 schools to be tutored through afterschool classes&period; Mr Faitotonu is involved with a Pacific Education Leadership course and the Minister of Education’s Pacific Advisory Board for Educational Renewal of Christchurch following the earthquakes&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>HAQUE&comma; Mr Iqbal Manzoor &lpar;Bali&rpar; &&num;8211&semi; For services to education governance<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mr Bali Haque has been involved with education for more than 40 years and been Principal of three secondary schools and of the National College of the Cook Islands&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mr Haque has been a key contributor to a number of Ministry of Education advisory policy groups and has actively supported and mentored beginning and experienced principals&period; He was on the national executive of the Post Primary Teachers Association and was also President of the Secondary Principals Association of New Zealand&period; He was Deputy <a class&equals;"wpil&lowbar;keyword&lowbar;link" href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;schoolnews&period;co&period;nz&sol;2015&sol;10&sol;new-chief-executive-for-education-council&sol;" title&equals;"Chief Executive" data-wpil-keyword-link&equals;"linked" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank">Chief Executive<&sol;a> of the New Zealand Qualifications Authority from 2006 to 2011&comma; during which he led major NCEA reforms and worked internationally with the Qualifications authorities of Ireland&comma; India and Thailand&period; Over the past two years&comma; he has led an independent Minister of Education-appointed taskforce to review the governance&comma; management and administration of the New Zealand compulsory schooling system&period; He is a member of the Board of Ako M&amacr;t&amacr;tupu – Teach First New Zealand&comma; which focuses on addressing inequities in the education system&comma; especially those facing M&amacr;ori and Pacific communities&period; He is a Board member of the Toi Foundation&period; Mr Haque has written two books &OpenCurlyQuote;Changing our Secondary Schools’ and &OpenCurlyQuote;New Zealand Secondary Schools and Your Child&colon; A Guide for Parents’&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>HART&comma; Mr Bruce Henry &&num;8211&semi; For services to education<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mr Bruce Hart was the Principal of Heretaunga College from 2003 to 2019 and has led innovative developments across all areas of education&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The senior curriculum reform that Mr Hart led at the College in 2017 and 2018 was identified in the Education Gazette as showing good practice&comma; due to its innovative approach and followed the creation of modern learning environments throughout the school&period; He played a major role in the establishment of the College’s Hospitality School&comma; making it the only high school in the country to offer the New Zealand Certificate in Basic Cookery Level 3&period; He helped to develop the Upper Hutt Schools Cluster into a collaboration of schools implementing improvements in teaching&comma; a precursor to the national development of Communities of Learning – Kahui Ako in 2015&period; He represented the Secondary Schools Principal’s Council on several advisory groups from 2016 to 2019&period; He was active in the Greater Wellington Secondary Schools Principal’s Association and was Chairperson of the Upper Hutt Principal’s Association&period; Mr Hart currently works as a Learning Support Impact Coach for Upper Hutt schools&comma; which is focused on improving the way schools and community groups work together to get better outcomes for children who need additional support for their learning&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>JACKSON&comma; Mrs Sally Anne&comma; JP &&num;8211&semi; For services to special education<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mrs Sally Jackson has been active in the disability sector for 52 years and a leader in the education system for 40 years&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mrs Jackson pioneered work on learning design for children with autism&comma; including an assessment class at Naenae School in Wellington&comma; to determine the supports needed to enable children with additional learning needs to be included in classes with their peers&period; From 1996 to 2002&comma; she was project manager for implementation of the &OpenCurlyQuote;Special Education 2000’ policy&comma; which aimed to create a fully inclusive education system in Aotearoa by the year 2000&period; She was inaugural Board of Trustees Deputy Chairperson at Upper Hutt College&comma; where she was instrumental in disestablishing segregation of students with additional needs in favour of inclusive practices&period; In her Ministry of Education senior manager roles&comma; she has led a number of initiatives including the establishment of Resource Teachers for students with learning and behaviour challenges&comma; the national communication service&comma; interpreter support and a Deaf education strategy for Aotearoa&comma; and a Specialist Teacher Qualification among other projects&period; Recently as Chief Advisor Learning Support&comma; she has led the Ministry’s engagement with the disability sector&period; Mrs Jackson initiated the development of the First Signs programme for deaf children to develop early language through supporting families with New Zealand Sign Language in the home&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>KERR&comma; Mrs Shirley Diane &&num;8211&semi; For services to mycology<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mrs Shirley Kerr has been involved with mycology since 1999 and has been recognised by professionals nationally and internationally for her contributions to knowledge in this field&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mrs Kerr has a background in education&comma; teaching at several secondary schools between 1973 and 2017&comma; specialising in biology&period; She has been a driving force for mycological exploration and education in the Bay of Plenty area&period; She has built a database of species on her website Kaimai Bush and in 2019 published &OpenCurlyQuote;A Field Guide to New Zealand Fungi’&comma; which has been highly acclaimed nationally and internationally for its accessibility&period; She has found at least five previously undescribed species and recorded in excess of 600 different species&period; She served on the council of the Fungal Network of New Zealand &lpar;FUNNZ&rpar; for 15 years&comma; was Treasurer from 2009 to 2011&comma; and played a key role in organising four annual New Zealand Fungi Forays&period; The Fungal Forays attract scientists from New Zealand and overseas&period; Mrs Kerr’s voluntary education efforts in mycology have included running workshops for upskilling in macro photography for botanical work&comma; fostering children’s interest at national forays&comma; organising field trips&comma; public speaking engagements&comma; and providing samples of Landcare New Zealand’s Herbarium or for overseas examination&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2> <&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p><strong>LYONS&comma; Mrs Colleen Janice &&num;8211&semi; For services to netball and education<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mrs Colleen Lyons has since been involved in every aspect of netball since 1965&comma; including playing&comma; umpiring&comma; coaching&comma; managing&comma; and governance&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mrs Lyons gained her first umpiring qualification in 1972 and continues to umpire at a local&comma; regional&comma; and national level&period; She was honorary secretary of the Otago Netball Union&sol;Association &lpar;now Dunedin Netball&rpar; from 1976 to 1989&period; She was a member of the Netball Otago Board in 2010 and 2011&comma; and of the Dunedin Netball Board from 2013&comma; including Chair in 2018&period; Since 2012 she has been a Trustee on the Board of the indoor sport and recreation Edgar Centre&period; She was appointed as a teacher at Queen’s High School from 1982 and as Head of Department from the mid-1980s&period; She was involved in the development of Careers and Transition education in New Zealand&comma; led the introduction of transition programmes from school to work&comma; and developed initiatives such as the national Certificate in Early Childhood&period; She was Assistant Principal at Queen’s High from 1997 until her retirement in 2008&period; She co-ordinated more than 30 netball teams every year&comma; as well as coaching&comma; managing&comma; fundraising&comma; supporting young umpires&comma; and helping with every South Island Secondary School tournament&period; Mrs Lyons has been heavily involved with the Ex Girls Association since 1968&comma; including time as Chair&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>VARNEY&comma; Mrs Helen Theresa Cecilia &&num;8211&semi; For services to education&comma; particularly Pacific education<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mrs Helen Varney has been a well-regarded principal for many years&comma; most recently as Principal of Target School&comma; Totara Vale from 2012 to 2020&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mrs Varney oversaw growth in the roll of Target School&comma; of which 30 percent are learning English as a second language and received strong Education Review Office reports during her tenure&period; She has been Secretary of the New Zealand Pasifika Principals Association &lpar;NZPPA&rpar; since 2016&comma; President of North Shore Principals in 2016 and of the Auckland Primary Principals Association in 2018&period; In 2020&comma; she was appointed Director and Lead Facilitator of Tautai o le Moana – Navigators of the Ocean&comma; a partnership with the Ministry of Education&comma; NZPPA and New Zealand Principals’ Federation&period; She ran the successful pilot of this programme over 18 months&comma; which supports principals of Pasifika students to build their capability as school leaders to improve outcomes for Pacific learners&comma; and is leading the initiative into its scale-up with the next cohort of principals&period; She is a qualified facilitator in the M&amacr;ori Achievement Collaboratives for school leaders to improve outcomes for M&amacr;ori learners&period; She has contributed an Auckland and Pasifika perspective to numerous Ministry of Education and inter-agency working groups&period; Mrs Varney has mentored teachers to become principals&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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Heather Barker Vermeer

Heather has worked as a journalist, writer and editor in England and Aotearoa New Zealand for over 20 years. She fell in love with words when she received a 'Speak & Spell' tech toy for Christmas in 1984.

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