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1999 Professorial Address: Nau te rourou, naku te rourou… Māori education: setting an agenda.

Abstract
Current educational policies and practices in Aotearoa/New Zealand were developed and continue to be developed within a framework of power imbalances, which effects Maori the greatest. An alternative model that seeks to address indigenous Māori aspirations and Treaty of Waitangi guarantees for self determination is presented here. This model suggests how a tertiary teacher education institution might create learning contexts wherein power-sharing images, principles and practices will facilitate successful participation by Māori students in mainstream classrooms. This model constitutes the classroom as a place where young people's sense-making processes (cultures) are incorporated and enhanced, where the existing knowledges of young people are seen as "acceptable" and "official" and where the teacher interacts with students in such a way that new knowledge is co-created. Such a classroom will generate totally different interaction and participation patterns and educational outcomes from a classroom where knowledge is seen as something that the teacher makes sense of and then passes on to students.
Type
Journal Article
Type of thesis
Series
Citation
Bishop, R. (2000). 1999 Professorial Address: Nau te rourou, naku te rourou… Māori education: setting an agenda. Waikato Journal of Education, 6, 3-18.
Date
2000
Publisher
Faculty of Education, University of Waikato
Degree
Supervisors
Rights
© 2000 Waikato Journal of Education. It is posted here by permission for personal use.