Taupo & Turangi Herald

Young moguls meet the market

Financial literacy project the Twilight Musical Market pays dividends for Waipā hīhī-a-Tia School

- Milly Fullick

Students at Waipāhīhī-a-Tia School are seeing the benefits of their schoolwork first-hand thanks to the Twilight Musical Market they planned and ran on October 27.

The market was devised as an endof-term project to bring to life the school’s immersion learning unit on the theme of financial literacy.

In recent years, Waipāhīhī-a-Tia has rejuvenate­d its curriculum, in consultati­on with the community and other stakeholde­rs, to reflect the skills and qualities that equip a young person for modern life.

“Understand­ing the value of money was the beginning,” says deputy principal Jenny Maloney.

“Then it grew from there, to focus all subjects on the topic.”

The unit saw students plan stalls from which to sell food, make products and games for the market, staff them on the evening and create their own marketing.

For younger students, this included basic numeracy, such as learning about coins and their value. Older students have covered ideas like supply and demand and persuasive advertisin­g.

The Twilight Musical Market was the perfect culminatio­n of students’ learning, giving them creative control and hands-on experience.

The idea came about after the realisatio­n that previous markets and galas were primarily run by adults, says Jenny, but students had enthusiasm for stepping up to share their own ideas.

The market blends perfectly with another student-driven concept; a music festival featuring the talents of current and former students, as well as students from Taupō Music School.

Jenny says music has “become a big part of who we are at Waipāhīhī”, so the event took on a musical element, too.

Money raised from the music festival will go toward the school’s bandroom and music programme, and proceeds from the market will fund the second phase of the school’s playground rejuvenati­on.

The enthusiasm from Waipāhīhī students was matched by the community, with an estimated turnout of about 700 visitors over the course of the evening.

Connecting the community after so much disconnect over the last few years was important to staff and students alike, Jenny says.

There was also an opportunit­y to demonstrat­e this term’s learning on the topic of ‘our people’, with contributi­ons from local businesses like MyNoke and organisati­ons such as Kids Greening Taupō and Taupō District Council.

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Students at Waipahihi-a-Tia School enhance their financial education at the Twilight Musical Market.
Photo / Supplied Students at Waipahihi-a-Tia School enhance their financial education at the Twilight Musical Market.

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