Hunter Park Kindergarten

About Hunter Park Kindergarten
About Free Kindergarten
Free Kindergartens typically offer sessional or part-day early learning programmes led by fully qualified teachers, following Te Whāriki and emphasising learning through play, social interaction, and community involvement. These centres cater to families seeking high-quality education in a not-for-profit, community-based setting with strong ties to local whānau.
What Is 20 Hours ECE funding?
20 Hours ECE is a government-funded initiative that helps reduce the cost of early childhood education for families with tamariki aged 3–5. Eligible children can receive up to 20 hours of funded care and education each week at participating services. Centres can set their own enrolment patterns and may ask for optional charges, but the funded hours themselves should be free of compulsory fees. If you are unsure how this works at Hunter Park Kindergarten, it is best to ask the centre directly how they apply 20 Hours ECE.
Community Profile
Roll & age distribution
Hunter Park Kindergarten currently has a roll of 45 children tamariki , with most children enrolled in the 2–5 years age band.
Ethnicity profile
European tamariki are the largest group (63% of the roll), alongside māori, pacific, other children.
Roll and demographic figures are based on data supplied by the Ministry of Education and were last updated on 01/07/2024.
Parent Reviews
“Wonderful kindergarten! 3 years ago, I enrolled my son here after his last kindergarten shutdown due to covid etc etc and he absolutely loved this place! He learnt SO MUCH here even made many friends which he still sees, he always talks about how much he misses Hunter Park. Im super greatful to have put him with amazing teachers, the staff really take care and encourage the kids plus they toilet trained my boy, easy for me. Thankyou Hunter Park sorry for the LATE review lol. I've recently had a baby and when the time comes I know where I will be enrolling him!! 😀😀”
“As a mother and grandmother, I'm very disappointed after visiting this kindy on a couple of occasions with what I thought had lovely, friendly, supportive kaimahi staff that worked there, to actually be completely the opposite in fact. It appears that there are biased, judgemental and unprofessional staff who did not follow through the most important protocol when working alongside tamariki and engaging at times with their whānau. If you should have concerns about a child's wellbeing it might be wise to kindly address any concerns with the parent first who is the main carer of the child/children first and foremost, then make the time to listen, be attentive, show kindness and genuinely care, you just never know what that parent is going through and you could of been the one person/s they could of felt safe to reach out too, if there was an issue at home. Especially if there is shared cared involved between two parents sometimes one parent especially a narcissistic one can easily turn on the other by slandering and falsify truths for their own advantage. This was the case for my daughter. There can be some really nasty people out there that do this for personal gain, leaving the other parent in total dismay, broken and fallen victim in more ways than one, which could of been avoidable if your kaimahi had of used initiative, cared enough for my whānau involved who have suffered because of the lack of support, understanding and empathy shown. To see all your staff wearing your black and white kākahu Mana -shirts with pride does NOT sit right with me, to carry mana you must first learn how to understand the fundamentals of māoritanga, such as Tikanga, Mana is Not just empty words, and you should practice what you teach! Because I will tell you tikanga was not practiced at all here. I hope next time without assuming or make accusations you consider saying to the parent. 'Hey, do you mind of we have a chat privately' Our kaimahi staff are here to listen anytime and happy to help you with (what ever the particular issue is?? ) never judge! and get to know the parents, especially the ones that may not stay long or talk much when they come there. Tehei Mauri Ora!!”
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