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Michelle Blake; Manuhiri Huatahi; Rangihurihia McDonald; Sue Roberts; Kim Tairi – New Review of Academic Librarianship, 2024
Across the globe universities are reckoning with issues of diversity, equity and inclusion. In Aotearoa (New Zealand), conversations have centered around decolonization and indigenization to assist with diversifying the workforce, reducing inequities and building inclusive cultures. This article presents case studies from three libraries and their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Academic Libraries, Decolonization, Pacific Islanders
Line-Noue Memea Kruse; 'Inoke Hafoka – Journal Committed to Social Change on Race and Ethnicity, 2024
Pacific Studies is an interdisciplinary field that began in the twentieth century in Australia, Aotearoa, and the United States (Mawyer et al., 2020). The field sought to understand the area and region of Oceania, but later, many scholars took more critical approaches to Pacific Studies. These approaches have provided more perspectives from those…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Educational History, Universities, Indigenous Knowledge
Alison Warren – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2025
A posthumanist critical multilogue may be understood as a many-voiced conversation where the concept of voice encompasses multiple ways of expressing in networks of enmeshed relations among humans and non-humans. A multilogue is critical when power relations are mapped, and posthumanist when contributions to multilogue conversations emerge from…
Descriptors: Biculturalism, Early Childhood Education, Story Telling, Teaching Methods
Williams, Ngaroma; Fletcher, Jo; Ma, Ting – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2023
Te Whariki, the first bicultural early childhood education curriculum in Aotearoa New Zealand, gained national and international attention. While there was widespread acceptance of its bicultural intent, Te Whariki was not well understood and implemented as a bicultural curriculum. Early childhood education teachers lacked confidence and struggled…
Descriptors: Biculturalism, Early Childhood Education, Pacific Islanders, Ethnic Groups
Steven S. Sexton – Education 3-13, 2024
This study sought to investigate sixteen New Zealand primary student teachers in the second year of their three-year Bachelor of Teaching (Primary) initial teacher education (ITE) programme. Specifically, how these participating student teachers planned for science, technology, and the arts as they worked to be both more effective and culturally…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Teachers, Elementary School Teachers, Culturally Relevant Education
Melina Marama Amos; Lisa Darragh; Tony Trinick – set: Research Information for Teachers, 2024
There is a significant lack of te reo Maori resources, especially digital materials, for learning pangarau/mathematics. Few studies have investigated how well digital resources for pangarau align with kaupapa Maori principles. In this article, we examine a digital resource, Matific, from a kaupapa Maori perspective. We find the te reo version of…
Descriptors: Malayo Polynesian Languages, Instructional Materials, Mathematics Instruction, Pacific Islanders
Christopher Burns; Maia Hetaraka; Alison Jones – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
This article draws attention to shifting educational discourses on the two texts of the 1840 treaty: te Tiriti o Waitangi and the Treaty of Waitangi. Policy and resource conversations in education reveal subtle strategic shifts in use of an invented idea of "treaty principles"--from standing in for and attempting to reconcile the two…
Descriptors: Treaties, Politics, Teaching Methods, Language Usage
Tiria Shaw; Hoana Mcmillan – Early Childhood Folio, 2023
In te ao Maori, our connection to our maunga and physical landmarks speaks to who we are as a people. Our maunga are also a source of inspiration and direction. This article draws on the symbolism of maunga and describes a Maori process of the way maunga can also act as a metaphorical journey to strengthening identity and transformative change. It…
Descriptors: Malayo Polynesian Languages, Ethnic Groups, Pacific Islanders, Ethnicity
Furness, Jane; Rua, Mohi; Masters-Awatere, Bridgette; Piercy-Cameron, Gemma; Cochrane, Bill; Heaton, Sharyn – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2023
Globally, literacy can be conceived of in different ways. Two perspectives that have influenced adult literacy policy internationally are the economic functionalist and the sociocultural. In Aotearoa New Zealand, Maori educators have repeatedly advanced a matauranga Maori perspective of literacy. This perspective has parallels with the embodied,…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Adult Literacy, Pacific Islanders, Ethnic Groups
Hetaraka, Maia; Meiklejohn-Whiu, Selena; Webber, Melinda; Jesson, Rebecca – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2023
Western literacy theories and models often reflect Eurocentric notions of literacy and literacy practices. In Aotearoa New Zealand, the prevalence of these conceptualisations is linked to issues of power and result in a narrow and inaccurate framing of Maori tamariki (children). In this article Tiritiria, a Maori philosophical view of knowledge,…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Pacific Islanders, Ethnic Groups, Malayo Polynesian Languages
Maia Hetaraka – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
There is much to celebrate about the liberal-progressive approach championed by New Zealand, which continues to be a prized feature of New Zealand education. Many liberal-progressive practices developed in New Zealand and contextualised for New Zealand students that sought to expand and enrich education were borrowed from Native Schools, Maori…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Ethnic Groups, Pacific Islanders, Progressive Education
Te Huia, Awanui – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2022
Te reo Maori (the Maori language) continues to be learned by Maori and Pakeha from Aotearoa New Zealand. The concept of language anxiety has been the topic of study by numerous authors due to its ability to interfere with second language production from cognition to output. For a group of Pakeha (New Zealand European) learners of te reo Maori,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Malayo Polynesian Languages, Indigenous Populations, Pacific Islanders
Anne Feryok – Journal for the Psychology of Language Learning, 2023
Our everyday language use is mostly intuitive (Lieberman, 2000), in the sense of tacit and automatic, and it reveals ourselves in what we say and how we say it. In this study I use the interaction order--the idea that social facts such as identity are constituted by social interaction--to interpret a research interview that was threatened by my…
Descriptors: Intuition, Self Concept, Failure, Reflection
Amy Hancock – Teachers and Curriculum, 2023
Through the creation of a matauranga Maori framework, termed Te Kunenga, this review has investigated how Maori teachers and Maori students have experienced inclusion in English-medium schools in Aotearoa New Zealand. Reviewed literature included qualitative published research and government reports from 2004-2022, when Ministry-led initiatives…
Descriptors: Pacific Islanders, Ethnic Groups, Malayo Polynesian Languages, English (Second Language)
Amy Smith; Melissa Derby – Kairaranga, 2023
This paper examines how kaiako (teachers) view professional learning and development training (PLD) in structured literacy (SL) in a Maori-medium immersion context. Through interviews with kaiako in a kura kaupapa Maori (Maori-medium educational setting) who teach students in Years 1-6, and images of the literacy environment to capture some of the…
Descriptors: Pacific Islanders, Faculty Development, Malayo Polynesian Languages, Language of Instruction