Some work towards this goal had already been completed. Two adjoining classrooms at the school had their shared wall removed to create one large classroom with two teachers sharing the space, enabling them to share lessons and cater to differing abilities of students.
Mrs Hawes said she had looked at what other long-standing schools in the Bay had done to modernise their environments, such as Pahoia and Maungatapu.
"We're looking at collaborative teaching rather than one teacher working how to best meet the needs of the students. When you have two teachers working together they learn off each other and are not alone in trying to nut out how to best move a group of kids along. It's trying to utilise the best of everyone's ability."
Hand in hand with collaborative teaching came the need for extra space. Two teachers shared one big space and children could sit where they wanted. Mrs Hawes said children naturally gravitated towards certain places, some preferring to sit at a table with classmates, others preferring a quiet space on the floor.
To cater for this, the classes would also need to be widened.
Mrs Hawes said she would want to retain school landmarks such as its belltower.