Kumeroa

Kumeroa is a farming settlement in Tararua District and Manawatū-Whanganui region of New Zealand's North Island. It is about ten minutes' drive from Woodville, on the opposite side of the Manawatū River.

The township consists of a school, community hall, tennis club and church. Most residents live on farms or lifestyle blocks.[1]

Education

Kumeroa School is a co-educational state primary school for Year 1 to 8 students,[2] with a roll of 41 as of March 2020.[3]

The school merged with Hopelands School in 1994 and Kohinui School in 2008.

In 2009, a Ministry of Education review proposed closing eight of the ten schools in the Tararua bush area, including Kuemroa. Principal Keryl Kelleher told the Dominion Post she was shocked by the proposal.[4]

The school was then known as Kumeroa-Hopelands School until 2018.[1]

Students at the school have designed, built and run a vegetable garden, chicken coop, worm farm and pizza oven. The school has a wētā house in trees and a greenhouse constructed out of recycled plastic bottles. Students also do pest control and run a beehive at a local QEII National Trust covenant block.[1]

Each year, students also shoot and trap possums for the school's Possum Hunt Gala, take part in the Young Farmer of the Year competition, and sell sunflowers on the side of the road for fundraising.[1]

gollark: It seems that you explicitly suggested it was good because it gave more power to rural people than they would otherwise get based on population.
gollark: According to my badness determination metrics.
gollark: What I am saying is that deliberately designing an electoral system and then messing with it so that a particular group consistently gets outsized amounts of power is bad, and that it isn't particularly justified based on "cultural differences" because there are lots of culturally different groups.
gollark: There are cultural differences based on different factors, though.
gollark: There are divisions other than rural/city. Why pick that one and muck with the system to favour one side of it?

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.