The Timaru Herald

Exam nerves? Then go to the dogs

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A classroom filled with dogs has become the newest weapon in the fight against exam jitters at Kapiti College.

The college set up a room with dogs last week to help students ease tension before senior practice exams.

The dog room was the idea of science teacher Jacqui Graham who said it came from scientific research on the calming effects of animals. ‘‘Exams have always been a stressful time for students’’, she said.

‘‘What the science has shown us is that stroking the dog will relax the students, so if we can give them a calm place to relax before the exams, then statistica­lly that should make them do better.’’

She said a roster of about a dozen staff-owned pooches took turns to hang out with students in the classroom, twice a day, each day of last week.

Graham’s own dog, Willow, a spoodle, was one of the pack that drew a steady flow of students before they sat exams.

The dogs on the roster on Friday included Taz, a fox terrierchi­huahua cross, Mocha, a pugspitz, potentiall­y a spug, and Poppy, a three-legged labradoodl­e that lost her limb to cancer.

They drew a crowd of students to the classroom during the lunch break, with the dogs lapping up the attention of the teens who then headed off to physics and dance exams. One of the most popular was a swedish vallhund, which looked like a wolf on corgi legs.

Graham said she had heard that universiti­es had similar initiative­s but had never heard of it being done in the secondary schools.

Staff had brought in dogs that would play well with other dogs, and humans. And their presence in the school had even helped calm teachers as well.

Graham said it was the first time the dogs-in-school approach was used and it was so popular they hoped to bring it back for NCEA exams in November.

 ?? PHOTO: FAIRFAX NZ ?? Kapiti College year 12 students, from left, Samantha Swift and Nadia Moore with Honey the dog.
PHOTO: FAIRFAX NZ Kapiti College year 12 students, from left, Samantha Swift and Nadia Moore with Honey the dog.

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