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For teachers

Who is it for?

Clubs is a flexible, learner-centred programme designed for Y2-10 students eager to dive deep into a specific interest.

 

 While open to all, neurodivergent students often find Clubs particularly engaging as they can explore their passions and connect with peers across NZ. This helps boost engagement and builds social and emotional skills.

 

 Most Clubs have versions tailored for both Tamariki and Rangatahi.

How do I sign up my students

All you have to do is fill in a short form with some details about you, your school and the students you are signing up.

 

You can sign up as many students as you like on one form, and you can add more later by submitting additional forms. You can sign up a student for multiple clubs.

 

You’ll be sent links to get started as soon as you submit your completed form.

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What benefits does it have?

Clubs helps busy teachers meet the needs of curious, sparky learners who need more than standard curriculum work.

Clubs impacts

Identity-Affirming Peer Connection

Clubs gives students – especially neurodivergent, homeschooled, and gifted learners – access to like-minded peers, helping them feel seen, heard, and understood.

Students repeatedly described the joy of “finding people who think like me” and being around others who “understand the words you say.” This sense of belonging is powerful for learners who often feel isolated in their regular environments.

  • Boosts self-esteem and emotional wellbeing.

  • Builds confidence to share work, take risks, and express themselves.

  • Enables social learning in a safe, affirming space.

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Social & emotional skills

Students deeply value the opportunity to share their work, receive feedback, and learn from each other in Clubs’ stream environment.

Across interviews, students said they loved seeing what others were doing, leaving comments, being inspired by peers, and feeling proud when someone noticed their post. This interaction helps normalize sharing, models what’s possible, and creates a ripple effect of creative confidence.

  • Encourages feedback literacy and positive communication.

  • Helps students feel seen and celebrated by peers.

  • Fosters a collaborative, generative learning culture.

  • Collaboration on shared passions - like writing a story together or working on a DnD campaign

Passion-Driven Learning & Intrinsic Motivation

Clubs fuels curiosity by letting students explore personal interests in a way that feels meaningful, flexible, and student-led. This can spark real-world action by helping students discover and deepen their interests—sometimes leading to new life goals, creative projects, and future study pathways.

Students aren’t completing tasks for extrinsic rewards—they're doing them because they’re interesting, challenging, and fun. Whether it's designing a game map, researching mushrooms, or creating a custom dictionary, learning is purposeful and joyful.

  • Encourages deep thinking and creativity.

  • Builds project skills and self-direction.

  • Supports unschooling and inquiry-based education models.

  • Connects school-like learning with real-life impact.

  • Helps students build identity through passion.

  • Interests grow into purpose: art, writing, reading, activism, design, science, and more.

  • Students take real-world action — writing to councils, launching projects, learning new languages

  • Builds confidence to share ideas, take risks, and lead.
     

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Challenge & Cognitive Stretch

Clubs provides accessible, non-graded challenges that push students to try new things, develop their thinking, and apply their strengths.

Students valued activities that were “quick but challenging,” appreciated tasks that “made me think,” and kept returning for inspiration even when not required to. Clubs becomes a "boredom buster" and "brain stretch" when school isn't enough.

  • Offers cognitive challenge without pressure or perfectionism

  • Encourages experimentation and iterative thinking.

  • Encourages deep, independent learning through creative, open-ended tasks.

  • Supports asynchronous, self-directed exploration across disciplines.

  • Ideal for learners who “already know the curriculum” and need more.

How do teachers use it?

Clubs is a versatile, teacher-friendly programme. It is FREE for NZ students, thanks to Ministry of Education funding.
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In-class extension

Use Clubs as an extension for students who’ve completed their curriculum work.

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Homework extension 

Encourage students to explore Clubs at home and support parental involvement.

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Extension programmes

Integrate Clubs into your school’s extension programmes to connect students with peers across NZ.

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Passion Projects / Genius Hour / Talent Time

Use Clubs to support these in-school programmes with resources, tutorials, and project planning tools.

What our teachers have to say

"Anything that can help those kids is good. Some of them just need more stimulation — and Clubs gives that to them in a safe way. I’ve added it to part of the curriculum as enrichment for my gifted students"

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Your role as a teacher

Your role is to guide students in developing and monitoring their Clubs Plan—a one-page plan outlining the activities they aim to complete over a period you choose.

Clubs are student-driven, allowing flexibility in how activities are tackled. There’s no formal grading (except for Badges), and you’ll review and adjust their plan with them as they go.

 

We ask for a quick feedback form at the end of each term to track engagement and impact and gather ideas on improving Clubs for everyone.

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Contact us

If you have any questions about the Neurodiversity in Education Project, please get in touch:

Phone: 0800 769 243

Email: hello@neurodiversity.org.nz

Postal Address:
c/ Russell McVeagh, Vero Centre,
48 Shortland Street, Auckland Central, Auckland, 1010, New Zealand

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©2023 Neurodiversity in Education Project. All rights reserved.

Charities Commission Registration No. CC50461

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