Governance Rathkeale is currently owned by the Trinity Schools Trust, managed by the Trinity Schools Trust Board, chaired by Lisa Rossiter, while the school is governed by a
board of trustees chaired by George Murdoch.
Staff Current senior staff positions: • Principal: Adam Gordon (Acting) • Deputy Principals: Willie Shafer, Michelle Norris
Houses Boys are split into three houses to compete in various sporting, cultural and academic competitions. The houses are named after old English schools;
Rugby House,
Cranleigh House, and
Repton House. In 2009 sports competitions between the houses were named Halberg, after gold medallist runner
Sir Murray Halberg, Hillary, after mountaineer
Sir Edmund Hillary, and Blake, after yachtsman
Sir Peter Blake.
Sport Both summer and winter sport is compulsory at Rathkeale College, with a wide range of sports offered. The main summer sports are
cricket and
tennis, while the main winter sports are
rugby,
hockey and association football. Rathkeale College has sports exchanges with
Christ's College,
Lindisfarne College,
Hutt International Boys' School,
Wanganui Collegiate,
Scots College and
St. Patrick's College, Silverstream.
Culture Houses compete in a range of cultural competitions, including a House music (choral and band) competition, House
haka competition, and in previous years, a House drama competition. The college also offers lessons in many musical instruments, as well as the
Viva Camerata choir, combined with St. Matthew's Collegiate, and also two smaller groups: A
barbershop quartet founded in 2018 and a male octet (Stars) formed in 2019. Many small drama performances are produced by drama classes or for the Shelia Winn
Shakespeare Festival, as well as a major school production being produced every year, which usually alternates between dramas and musicals. Past shows have included
Guys and Dolls, King Lear,
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,
The Crucible,
Footloose,
Les Misérables and
Twelfth Night.
Special character As a State Integrated school, Rathkeale must have a "special character" to justify its existence. Rathkeale College's special character includes being single-sex (until year 12), a boarding school, and having compulsory sport participation. However, the main factor is its
Anglican religion. Boys attend weekly chapel services, and junior boys take religious education lessons. This special character has recently been enhanced by the purchase of a chapel for the school – St. Martin's on the Close, formerly St. Martin's Church,
Mangaweka. The chapel was purchased, moved and restored by the Friends of St. Martin's Trust. Former Board of Trustees chair Robyn Prior received the Bishop's Medal from
Bishop of Wellington Tom Brown for her services in acquiring and restoring the chapel. ==References==