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Tanya Fitzgerald; Diane Kirkby; Caroline Jordan – History of Education, 2024
Narratives of international educational exchange programmes such as the US-sponsored Fulbright and the Commonwealth-centred Carnegie grants reveal the formative role these exchanges played in extending the geographical, scholarly, and professional boundaries of women's worlds. Notably, these award schemes influenced, shaped and expanded the career…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Awards, International Educational Exchange
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Hilary Moss – History of Education Quarterly, 2024
This essay queries how ideas about school choice traversed the Pacific in the late twentieth century. Specifically, it reconstructs and deconstructs the visits of two African American proponents of parental school choice, Annette "Polly" Williams and Howard Fuller, from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to Aotearoa New Zealand in the 1990s. Drawing…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Choice, Parent Role, Parent Participation
Sue Stover – Sage Research Methods Cases, 2017
This study's original data were collected in interviews with 23 pioneer leaders of early childhood education in Aotearoa, New Zealand. They were asked to remember play, free play and learning through play. Their collective experiences cover over 60 years of 'the everyday' recalled in the local array of diverse early childhood services as well as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Play, Oral History
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Stover, Sue – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2016
Geographically isolated in the south-west Pacific but intellectually and culturally connected to Western Europe, Aotearoa New Zealand's early childhood education sector is a unique mix of influences. The imprint of progressive education is evident in a legacy of "free play" programmes, yet its national curriculum is built on the…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Play, Ethnic Groups, Pacific Islanders
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Grant, Barbara; Lee, Alison; Clegg, Sue; Manathunga, Catherine; Barrow, Mark; Kandlbinder, Peter; Brailsford, Ian; Gosling, David; Hicks, Margaret – International Journal for Academic Development, 2009
More than 40 years after its beginnings, academic development stands uncertainly on the threshold of becoming a profession or discipline in its own right. While it remains marginal to the dominant stories of the university, it has become central to the institution's contemporary business. This Research Note describes an enquiry that uses a…
Descriptors: Educational Development, Intellectual Disciplines, Epistemology, Inquiry
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Stephenson, Maxine – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2009
Maori women teachers in nineteenth-century New Zealand have been little acknowledged in educational histories, and indeed, in some instances their contributions have been explicitly nullified. Those who have taken leadership roles have been no more visible. This article examines the silencing and exclusion from educational history of a young Maori…
Descriptors: Educational History, Foreign Countries, Leadership, Womens Education
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Chou, Michaelyn P. – International Journal of Oral History, 1985
One measure of a nation's historical, sociological, and cultural endeavors, including oral histories, is revealed by the expressed needs of its librarians and archivists who acquire, maintain, and provide access to the products of such activities. The oral history movement and access to oral history products in Pacific countries are discussed. (RM)
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Conferences, Educational Practices, Foreign Countries
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Stephenson, Maxine – Race, Ethnicity & Education, 2006
For 100 years a system of Native Schools operated in New Zealand, the principal objective of which was to support a state policy of assimilation. Decisions to disband the system were made in a context of social, economic and demographic change, and were rationalized as providing a positive step forward for Maori. Also influential was the growing…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Closing, Ethnic Groups, Pacific Islanders
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Timutimu, Ngareta; Simon, Judith; Matthews, Kay Morris – History of Education: The Journal of the History of Education Society, 1998
Utilizes information gathered from archival and other documentary sources to develop greater understanding of the ways in which New Zealand's Native School system operated and was perceived by the Maori communities. Gives voice to former pupils of the Native Schools by establishing an oral-history database of their experiences within the school…
Descriptors: Biculturalism, Cultural Differences, Curriculum Research, Database Design
May, Helen; Middleton, Sue – 1996
Most studies on the history of educational ideas have focused on what influential educational theorists and policy-makers have said and written at particular times, constructing a "view from the top." The project from which this article is derived focused on the ways theoretical debates have been "lived" by teachers in New…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Development, Educational History, Educational Theories
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Middleton, Sue – Teaching and Teacher Education, 1996
This study examined the tides of educational thought of New Zealand teachers from the 1920s-1990s, taking information from a study of the educational life histories of 150 teachers and former teachers ages 21-98. Using case studies, the paper discusses the impact of student-centered learning ideas in secondary schools from the 1950s-1980s. (SM)
Descriptors: Biographies, Case Studies, Educational History, Educational Theories
Middleton, Sue; May, Helen – 1995
This paper reports research on: the major educational ideas that have shaped New Zealand's educational policies and influenced the content and form of teacher training and early childhood education; the educational ideas that have influenced teachers and former teachers; and how teachers have reacted to the major changes that policymakers have…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Educational History, Educational Policy, Educational Research
Simon, Judith, Ed.; Smith, Linda Tuhiwai, Ed. – 2001
The Native Schools system was a system of village primary schools for Maori children operated by the New Zealand state from 1867 to 1969. The official purpose of the system was assimilation. Virtually all previous historical accounts of the Native Schools have been written by Pakeha (non-Maori, usually of European descent) and based on material…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Child Health, Colonialism, Culture Conflict