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Performing arts students on stage

Internships

Employers are invited to participate in our media arts internship programme.
Students from the School of Media Arts are available to intern with employers who can benefit from their skills and talents. Areas of expertise include moving image, photography, graphic design, digital design, journalism, painting, sculpture, audio engineering, music, sound design, public relations and advertising.

What are internships?

Internships are 120 hour placements of Wintec students, offering a structured form of work experience that students receive course credit for.

How it works

Students keep a daily journal, build a portfolio and present a seminar and written report to their peers. The employer sets the student's tasks and projects, and completes an evaluation form on completion to provide feedback on the student's performance. Find out more about the details and employer benefits of internships in the FAQ section.

Further information

For further information contact the Internship director.

Projects

New Wave publication project

A book put together by Media Arts staff and students records the journeys of 18 migrants who now live in Hamilton, but were born outside New Zealand​. The New Wave: Hamilton’s Migrant Community, looks at the growing diversity of Hamilton’s population.  While 70 percent of Hamilton is broadly defined as European, and 20 percent as Māori and Pasifika, there are also citizens from 160 ethnic backgrounds. Journalism tutor Charles Riddle says it is this last 10 percent of the city's population that is fascinatingly diverse and makes for interesting reading. Around 15 students worked on the publication under the expert guidance of editor in residence Aimie Cronin. The project team also worked closely with the Hamilton Migrant Centre and the Hamilton City Council. The book is the first phase in a two-year project which will culminate with an exhibition in the Waikato Museum.

New Wave Launch books Photo by Geoff Ridder

River City Sound sessions

A moving image student produced a multi-camera production making live videos for local bands.

Matariki Interactive Waka project

The Matariki Interactive Waka Project is a multi-disciplinary project that aims to create an interactive waka sculpture that will sit beside the Waikato River at Hamilton’s Ferrybank Park and draw the people of the city back to the river.

It’s a community project lead by Media Arts tutor Joe Citizen with Wintec students in the areas of Trade, Engineering, Media Arts and Early Childhood acting as co-creators of the sculpture. We also have several Wintec staff members and independent researchers on board who are all working hard towards a final goal that benefits the people of Hamilton and visitors to this beautiful place. We are also working in partnership with Wintec’s Maori Achievement Office who are advising on tikanga, matauranga and whenua consultation.

Artist's impression of Tōia Mai, Hamilton’s new interactive waka sculpture to be gifted by Wintec.

Moving Image students profile Waikato Museum

One of Moving Image Production students assignments is a group client-based Documentary. This is the fourth year we have teamed up with Waikato Museum who has been our Client for two Museum staff profiles that share behind the scenes stories at the Waikato Museum. Over the last few years of this ongoing community project, Moving Image students have made an excellent range of videos highlighting a variety of Museum staff profiles: what they do, how they do it and why they like working at the Waikato Museum. We look forward to continuing our relationship with the Waikato Museum again in the near future.

News

Wintec | Te Pūkenga student journalists celebrate Māori 'Rising Stars' for Matariki

Image: Rawiri Keelan is a graduate of the Wintec | Te Pūkenga Bachelor of Music and Performing Arts. He is now studying the Graduate Diploma in Communication with a focus on media and creative writing, digital marketing, and communication.

Wintec | Te Pūkenga Communication students have just launched a suite of stories, in collaboration with Hamilton City Business Association (HCBA), highlighting ‘rising stars’ celebrating Matariki, that live, work, and create within central Kirikiriroa Hamilton. 

The project was set in motion when Wintec | Te Pūkenga Team Manager Julie Ashby, a member of the HCBA board, instigated the idea to celebrate Māori creatives in the area and some graduates and other talent in the CBD.

Communication tutors Abby Dalgety and Cate Prestidge went on to integrate the idea into the student-run Agency, which forms part of the Wintec Communication qualifications. 

As a media team, the students interviewed eight creatives in the central city, brokered by Creative Waikato and the HCBA, whose work spans across music, hair and beauty therapy, art and fashion, to interview and undergo photoshoots for a feature of “Rising Stars” for Matariki on the Hamilton Business Association website.

The media team was made up of students’ Kae Evans (writing and social media design), Emmalea Taylor (photographer and writer) and Rawiri Keelan (writer and ako support) working alongside agency student lead Phoenix van Driel who helped with the design work. Communication tutor Prestige mentored and edited their writing and coordinated the client feedback to complete the project in time for Matariki.

“It was a real collaboration team effort,” says Dalgety. “Ra Keelen taking the lead in mentoring and guiding the group of students, Emmalea Taylor took the lead with the photography and Kae Evans leading the planning of the project (with myself as the tutor for the Agency).”

Rawiri Keelan is a graduate of the Wintec | Te Pūkenga Bachelor of Music and Performing Arts. He is now studying the Graduate Diploma in Communication with a focus on media and creative writing, digital marketing, and communication.

“It can get in my head that I’m too old to do this,” says Keelan about his journey as a mature student. 

“Digital Marketing and agencies are full of young people, but I fell into this social media marketing rabbit hole, and I’ve realised that storytelling is the essence of this and that can come from different backgrounds.

“It’s hard to tell stories that flow within limitations but I’m kind of getting used to the elements that need to be in there. I try and approach it like music,” he says. 

Keelan says his children have been surprised to see these feature articles published online, “they’ve always seen me do my music, but having these stories published, it makes it real for them, they didn’t know that I could write articles”.   

Dalgety says the collaboration utilises the student-run marketing agency to help tell these stories. 

“They are future rising stars themselves!” 

Working on real-world projects has been an exciting and inspiring experience for these students, says Dalgety. 

“When they saw the campaign go live it made it that much more real.”

Having the opportunity to talk to talented creatives in our community and help tell their stories was something the students felt a sense of pride about, says Dalgety, they got the “sense of privilege of being able to tell and share stories with the wider community”.

Wintec | Te Pūkenga is located within the Hamilton Kirikiriroa CBD and Dalgety says there are endless things to learn and be inspired by. 

“There is a lot of pride when your work is published for the local community, rather than handing in an essay or a theoretical assignment.

“To be able to experience real world applications whilst learning about how talented our city is has been a highlight for our students.”

Read the Matariki Rising Stars suite of stories on the Hamilton City Business Association website.

Learn more about studying Communication at Wintec | Te Pūkenga.

Events

  • Ngā Rā Tūwhera | Open Day

    Explore your future options at Ngā Rā Tūwhera | Open Day! This whānau-friendly experience is the perfect opportunity to meet our teams, discover course options, and get a sense of what study is all about.

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