MIT | Te Pūkenga Trades Academy ākonga celebrate at Prize Giving
Trades Academy ākonga (learners) have been celebrating their successes with teachers and whānau at prize givings across Aotearoa New Zealand, as the school year comes to an end.
The academies allow ākonga opportunities to access a wide range of trades and technology-related learning, while completing NCEA to support positive post-study transitions.
Ninety-three percent of ākonga overall move into employment or further study after participating in an academy (this figure is 91.5% for ākonga Māori and 89% Pacific).
More than half of the 11,186 academy places offered throughout the motu are delivered either on campus or in the workplace by business divisions of Te Pūkenga.
“Not only do Trades Academies provide an opportunity to learn technical and industry-specific skills, but they also develop employability and soft-skills of ākonga,” says Pounuku Ako ā-Motu: Tūāpapa me ngā Huarahi Ako | National Ako Director - Foundation and Pathways, Koren Hopoi.
“By travelling to and attending these programmes we see our rangatahi empowered through improved confidence and engagement in learning,” she says.
One of those ākonga is Porohu Hagai Noa who is in Year 13 at Sir Edmund Hillary Collegiate and was valedictorian at MIT | Te Pūkenga Trades Academy Prize Giving this year.
Porohu is a representative sportswoman in league and union, who recently returned from the Inspiring Explorers Expedition along with 21 other young leaders who traveled to South Georgia Island courtesy of the Antarctic Heritage Trust.
The top student at MIT’s academy in Building Construction and Allied Trades Skills this year, Ms Hagai Noa is excited about recently landing a five-year apprenticeship with Taylor’s Construction.
“My advice is if you work hard you’ll reach those far horizons,” she told those graduating from the academy.
“As Sir Ed once said, ‘it is not the mountain we conquer but ourselves.’ So go out and conquer the world.”
Fourteen Prime Minister’s Awards for Vocational Excellence were given to ākonga in MIT Trades Academy joining the more than three hundred Te Pūkenga learners who received such recognition this year.
The awards were launched in 2019 with the purpose of celebrating the achievements of secondary students enrolled in vocational programmes, and to raise the status of these pathways within high schools and colleges. Each recipient receives a monetary prize of $2,000.
“(When I received the PM’s Award) I was speechless and proud of myself,” says Christina Tuinauvai-Fuatogi of Mt Roskill Grammar who plans to continue studying Carpentry next year at Unitec | Te Pūkenga.
“As a Year 12 student, I was clueless of what I wanted to do when I leave school and this opportunity was a great shift in my life knowing there’s so many things I could study and do in the future,” says the 17-year-old who is focused on becoming a qualified builder with an interest in management.
An introduction to a vast array of different trades is available through academies nationwide. These include:
ICT Innovation |
Digital Technologies |
Digital Design & Animation
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Workplace Office Admin |
Computer Technology |
Computer Technician |
Early Childhood |
Exercise & Sport
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Fitness |
Youth Health |
Sports Skills & Coaching
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Intro to Nursing |
Hauora/Wellbeing
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Animal Care |
Café Skills |
Cookery |
Food & Beverage
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Baking |
Outdoor Education
|
Business Administration |
Business Enterprise |
Design |
Plumbing, Gasfitting, Drainlaying
|
Electrical Engineering |
Painting & Decorating
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Electrotechnology |
Engineering |
Mechanical Engineering |
Building & Construction
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Carpentry |
Apiculture
|
Equine |
Agriculture
|
Landscape Construction & Tree Work
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Forestry |
Primary Industries |
Sports Turf |
Manaaki Tauira |
Pikitoi |
Te Toi Whakairo |
Toi Māori |
Tourism & Travel |
NZ Police Pathways |
Road Transport |
Conservation |
Lab Science |
Performing Arts |
Creative Skills |
Radio Broadcasting & Entertainment
|
Media Design |
Audio/Music Technology and Game |
Art & Design |
Hair & Beauty (including Barbering) |
Massage Therapy |
Hospitality |
Automotive Engineering |
Horticulture |
Animal Care |
NZ Defence Pathways
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One of the successes celebrated at MIT Trades Academy Prize Giving was the further growth of P-TECH, a partnership between Ministry of Education, education providers and industry which seeks to develop pathways towards technology-related careers, particularly for groups currently underrepresented in those fields including Māori, Pacific and women.
“What started with a small cohort of students has now reached 289, 45% being Pasifika, 21% Māori and 38% females,” MIT | Te Pūkenga Pathways Manager Gaynor Matthews told the audience.
“This programme has been a huge success and shows the power of collaboration between schools, industry and tertiary education,” she says.
Te Pūkenga business divisions are also working together to provide secondary ākonga more opportunities.
This year, Pukekohe High School learners in the Level 2 Building programme were offered ten-week work placements at local building and landscaping companies through BCITO. Several gaining apprenticeships through this exposure to industry.
"For many of our ākonga, this is the start of their journey to achieving vocational qualifications which lead to meaningful employment. Trades Academies are a powerful enabler," says Koren Hopoi.
Demand for Trades Academy places continues to grow annually with 362 places for ākonga added and 17 new or reinstated programme areas available across the country in 2024.