New ZealandAucklandManurewaAlfriston School

Alfriston School

StateFull PrimaryCo-Educational
Manurewa, Auckland · Rural other
admin@alfriston.school.nz 09-2667845
Total Roll365enrolled students
Māori9.6%of roll
Pacific16.7%of roll
Asian61.1%of roll
Student Body
365
enrolled students
European/Pākehā22.2%
Māori9.6%
Pacific16.7%
Asian61.1%
GenderCo-Educational
Alfriston School

Ethnicity Breakdown

Alfriston School has a diverse student body with significant representation from multiple ethnic groups. Asian students make up the largest group at 61.1%.

365students
European/Pakeha22.2%
Maori9.6%
Pacific16.7%
Asian61.1%
European/Pakeha22.2%
Maori9.6%
Pacific16.7%
Asian61.1%
Source: Ministry of Education (2026).

Compared to National Averages

The bars below show Alfriston School's ethnicity breakdown compared to the national average across all New Zealand schools. The white reference line marks the national average for each group.

European/Pakeha
-23.8pp below avg22.2%
National average: 46%
Maori
-15.4pp below avg9.6%
National average: 25%
Pacific
+6.7pp above avg16.7%
National average: 10%
Asian
+49.1pp above avg61.1%
National average: 12%
Source: Ministry of Education (2026). National averages are approximate.

Ethnicity Roll Numbers

Absolute student numbers by ethnicity, as reported by the Ministry of Education. Students can identify with more than one ethnic group, so totals may exceed the total school roll.

Ethnic GroupStudents% of Roll
European/Pakeha8122.2%
Maori359.6%
Pacific6116.7%
Asian22361.1%
MELAA10
Other1
Total Roll365100%
Source: Ministry of Education (2026).

Understanding Ethnicity Data

Self-identified ethnicity

Ethnicity in New Zealand school data is self-identified by students and families at enrolment. A student may identify with multiple ethnic groups, which means ethnicity percentages may sum to more than 100%.

Maori students and cultural context

New Zealand schools have a unique responsibility under Te Tiriti o Waitangi. The proportion of Maori students can reflect a school's engagement with te reo Maori, tikanga, and culturally responsive practices.

Diversity is not a quality measure

A school's ethnic composition reflects its community, not its quality. Schools with high concentrations of any group serve their students well when they respond to their community's cultural, linguistic, and educational needs.

MELAA and Other categories

MELAA stands for Middle Eastern, Latin American, and African. The 'Other' category includes students who identify with ethnicities not covered by the main groups, as well as those who did not state an ethnicity.