Friday, May 10, 2019

Dr Melinda Webber

29/04/19

Keynote: Dr Melinda Webber
Ngaapuhi  & Te Arawa

"Optimising Maaori success and potential"

Ukaipo - a place of belonging

What should success look like?

  • Need to acknowledge the identity
  • maaori students know they are descended from ancestral heroes
  • whakapapa
Stereotype Threat ( Steele, 1997)
Durie,1997, p156

Stereotype threat is the fear

Stop being Maaori or stop being Smart?

Maaori students need access to programmes of learning that affirm and promote Maaori theories, Maaori knowledge, Maaori heroes/role models and Maaori worldview.

To whakamana - maaori students

Different contexts demand different behaviours.
Localised differences

Key research questions
  1. How does Te Arawa define Maaori success?
  2. In what ways fo whaanau, teachers and the wider Te Arawa community foster conditions that enable success to manifest?
  3. How is mana enacted by Te Arawa students? To what effect?
Ask students about someone that inspires them and describe that person in five words?

Embedded achievement- I am a success because I'm Maaori.

Maui - nanakia - cheeky
Need to see the mana in every child.
Quality 2
Successful Maaori students are diligent and have an internal locus of control.

Characteristics
Patience, commitment and a sacrifice of time and effort; an ability to overcome difficulties; resolute confidence often balanced with a quiet, 

Quality 3
Successful Maaori students learn how to nurture strong relationships.

Characteristics
The ability to sustain relationships that are premised on a balance of assertiveness and warmth (manaaki) because this provides sustenance for the inner person.
  • encouraging
  • willing to learn from others
  • wiling to mentor others
  • aware of their 

Quality 4
Successful Maaori students are curious and innovative

Characteristics
An enquiring mind which probes, draws conclusions and makes associations; an exploratory orientation that is exploited in social and academic activities.

Application to school & work
  • courageous
  • competitive
  • curious
Quality 5
Successful Maaori students look after their wellbeing.

Attention to physical, spiritual and mental health needs that are needed to flourish at school, affirming the inexplicable link between wellness and learning.

Quality 6
Successful Maaori students are committed to advancing their own knowledge. They are scholars who know where they want to go and persevere to achieve their goals.

An aptitude for things scholarly and commitment to excellence is evident. An intrinsic desire to learn and an innate curiosity.

Application to school & work
  • can apply themselves
  • driven
  • purposeful
  • aspirational
Coming home and being in-service to their whaanau is important to Maaori students.

Quality 7
Successful Maaori students possess humility

Characteristics
A quality which is often a cultural point difference because it is about service to others, generosity of spirit and putting others before the self

  • puts others before self
  • accept criticism
  • work in service to others
  • team player

Quality 8

Successful Maaori students understand core Maaori values

An ability to model the most meaningful qualities in Maaori culture, portrayed by way of Aroha (love) manaaki (care) and wairua (spirituality)

Application to school & work
Manaakitanga - ability to care and be hospitable to others
Kotahitanga - ability to commit to a kaupapa/vision
Wairuatanga - moral compass and sense of social justice

The Mana Model- Macfarlane, Webber, Cookson-cox, & McRae (2014)

Mana Tangatarua       the skill, knowledge and confidence to          
                                   navigate success in two (or more) worlds
Mana Tuu 
Mana Motuhake
Mana ūkaipō                Belonging and connection to place
Mana Whaanau

New study: Project
Kia tuu rangatira ai ngaa iwi Maaori: living, succeeding, and thriving as Iwi Maaori.

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