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How Jean makes it all add up

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At the 2024 Volunteering Waikato Awards last week, Jean McKenzie was named Education Innovator of the year. She says her aim is to give all students the best opportunities to influence their futures.

Jean McKenzie, right, with Waipa District councillor Clare St Pierre at the Volunteer Waikato Awards

On an uncharacteristically warm winter’s day earlier this month, Jean McKenzie stood on the sideline of a rugby game where 16-year-old Xavier Shields was playing for Te Awamutu College First XV.

Like parents and supporters, she cheered for the home team. But her interest in the match was much broader than the scoreline.

Also watching the game that day were Xavier’s parents, the school principal and the First XV coach. Jean spent much of the game chatting to each about Xavier’s future. In the business world that would be termed ‘networking’.

McKenzie likens it to a spider’s web. “It’s all about matching people up,” she says. The aim is to establish connections that will influence the future of young people like Xavier beyond the classroom.

At this year’s Volunteering Waikato – Te Ohu Tuuao o Waikato – annual awards, held at a function on June 20, McKenzie was named Education Innovator of the year in recognition of “hard work, dedication and commitment to volunteering and community engagement.”

She was delighted to be singled out but sees the accolade more as recognition of the success of the nearly 700 students who have enrolled in Mathematics for a Lifetime, a charitable trust founded by her, which offers initiatives, including free tuition to students from low income families who are struggling with maths.

Xavier was one of those students. Before he attended MFAL in Year 8, he would experience blind panic when faced with a maths problem he couldn’t solve. In Year 9, after tuition, he topped his class in maths and captained his rugby team. McKenzie says the results have given him confidence and skills for life. She has also introduced him to prospective employers, including Waipā Networks, a sponsor and partner of Mathematics for a Lifetime.

“The aim is to set up a ripple effect that goes beyond the classroom. All kids deserve to have opportunities to change their paths. If I can do that by bringing the right people together, that gives me huge pleasure.”

A former primary school teacher with a passion for maths, McKenzie has seen firsthand the impact of deprivation on education.

“Some kids would come into the classroom tired and hungry with no routines, being exposed to things they should never have seen.”

She remembers the moment her mindset around education changed forever.

“I was standing in a classroom and I had this epiphany. I knew if I just had more time with this one child, I could turn them around and change their life for the better.”

Ten years ago she established Impact Tutoring, a tuition programme, based in Te Awamutu, which also offers online courses for individuals and schools.  Mathematics for a Lifetime is the charitable offshoot of that business.

McKenzie’s charitable work extends beyond tuition. For nearly 18 years, she was a volunteer firefighter with Pirongia Fire and Emergency. She stepped down late last year to devote more time to her business and the charitable trust.

She says she has always been a person who steps towards something, rather than turning away.  “I believe people should help others.”

She also believes strongly in modelling the roles others can follow.

“Firefighting gave me the skills to deal with situations under pressure, and a belief that I can accomplish things. I don’t see mountains as daunting, I see them as something to climb. “

In 2019, Jean Mc Kenzie was named as Leader of the Year in the Waipā Excellence Business Awards.

Jean McKenzie at Volunteer Waikato Awards on June 20

 

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