Around 80 Year 13 students from across Waikato and Bay of Plenty came together on Tuesday for the Waikato Management School (WMS) Leadership Academy Summit Day. They heard about leading with compassion and empathy from celebrity speakers Mike King and Richie Barnett and spoke about personal self-assessment.
Students work together as part of the bike building activity
A surprise bike-building activity also taught students about the importance of working together, while giving back to the community.
Students grouped together to build 20 childrenâs bikes, donated by The Perry Charitable Trust and heavily discounted by Torpedo7. The completed bikes were checked over by Torpedo7 mechanics to ensure they were roadworthy and ready to be presented to families at the Hamilton Multicultural Services Trust.
A family of 10 from Congo who arrived in New Zealand in February after spending 17 years in a Rwanda refugee camp said the bikes will help Ange, 10, and Joshua, 8, get to and from school
Their brother Roger, 20, said they didnât have bikes in Congo, âso weâre thankful and incredibly grateful for the bikes given to us.â
WMS launched the Leadership Academy pilot in Term One 2022 to support ambitious students to become stronger leaders.
For Charla Dougal of Mount Maunganui College, leadership became more than just a popularity contest.
âTake being a prefect, for example. You wear the jacket, you face the school and model what you think a leader is. But looking at it now, itâs way more than that,â Charla says.
"Itâs about the little questions you ask. Itâs what you do for yourself and the conversations you have with different people.â
Mental health advocate Mike King encouraged students with a passion to jump feet first.
âIf you want to start a movement and be a good leader, have a passion and donât leave your loved ones behind,â Mike says.
âDonât test the water with one toe. If youâre passionate about something and you have an idea of what you want to do, then just jump in.
Former Kiwi rugby league captain Richie Barnett spoke about how his competitive attitude got him through one of the toughest moments in his professional career.
Richie had a full facial reconstruction following a smashing head clash during the 2000 Anzac Test. He suffered breaks to both cheekbones and his nose.
âI was in pain, people didnât even recognise me. I was told my career was over but after seven months I got back on the field,â Richie told students.
âNo matter what youâre going through, itâs how you deal with it.â
Stories like these solidified Anna Smithâs dream of becoming a surgeon.
âCaring for people is so important to me. I wish there were more people here to hear Mike and Richie speak so they could benefit from it too,â the Cambridge High School Head Girl says.
There were many lightbulb moments throughout the day. For Julie Brouwer of St Peterâs Cambridge, it was the realisation that leaders donât have to be in a leadership position.
Julie says being turned down as a prefect was incredibly upsetting, but after being nominated by her school for the Leadership Academy sheâs become a leader in her own way.
âI want to be a leader that motivates and inspires people,â Julie says. âI used to think leaders had to be direct and sometimes mean, but you can still treat people as people and you donât need to be in a hierarchical position to be respected.â
Throughout the programme, students benefit from world-class leadership concepts and training from WMS staff and executive fellow and Alum Jamie Fitzgerald. They also complete the WMS flagship first-year paper, Introduction to Leadership Communication, which means they will already have one paper if they go to university.
The pilot will conclude with a final hub day in Tauranga in September.
Find out more about the Waikato Management School.