Paparoa Street School
Paparoa Street School takes care to identify the kaimahi competencies required for the EOTC activities we deliver. All kaimahi involved in an EOTC event (i.e. kaimahi employed by the kura, including teaching and non-teaching kaimahi, as well as external contractors) must have the necessary information and competence (skills, knowledge, experience), or be adequately supervised, so that they can safely perform their role. If kaimahi kura do not have the relevant expertise for an activity, we seek outside expertise and may arrange to build capability within our kaimahi. The competencies required to run our EOTC programme are considered when recruiting new kaimahi.
We establish competency through means such as sighting recognised qualifications, and/or observation and skills assessment (by a more highly qualified/competent person). Competency requirements are benchmarked against industry qualifications (where they exist) and any relevant good practice guides.
We use the following tools to assess and document competence:
This information is used during our EOTC event and safety planning process to ensure the staffing proposed for the event has the required competencies for the particular EOTC activity.
We keep records about kaimahi competency for at least seven years, including induction, training, and qualifications. This helps identify and address any gaps in kaimahi competence needed to run our EOTC programme effectively and safely. This information may be used in the case of a notifiable event. See EOTC Incident Reporting.
Activity requirements
We record activity competency requirements and kaimahi competencies for each EOTC event in our EOTC safety planning and risk assessment documentation. This ensures the proposed kaimahi are competent to:
Support for kaimahi
At Paparoa Street School, we support kaimahi kura to become competent in EOTC processes and activity requirements through training and mentoring.
Release history: Term 1 2024, Term 1 2021, Term 1 2019