1 / 14

Kia tū ki te tahi United in thought, purpose and action

Changing Perspectives. Kia tū ki te tahi United in thought, purpose and action. Janine Kapa Deputy Chief Executive: Māori Development / Kaitohutohu OTAGO POLYTECHNIC, NZ 2018 PIN Conference, Yavapai College, AZ. Kaupapa / Content. Kāwanataka / Governance.

bryce
Download Presentation

Kia tū ki te tahi United in thought, purpose and action

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Changing Perspectives Kia tū ki tetahi United in thought, purpose and action • Janine Kapa • Deputy Chief Executive: Māori Development / Kaitohutohu • OTAGO POLYTECHNIC, NZ • 2018 PIN Conference, Yavapai College, AZ

  2. Kaupapa / Content

  3. Kāwanataka / Governance Formal agreements with mana whenua (Indigenous people who hold authority over their territory) • Kā papatipu rūnaka ki Araiteuru (x4 sub-tribal councils in Dunedin • Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Whātua in Auckland

  4. Kāwanataka / Governance 2 • Mana whenua rep. on Council • Komiti Kāwanataka, sub-committee to Council • Kaitohutohu (Advisor to the CE, 2004) Kaitohutohu / Deputy Chief Executive, Māori Development (2016) • Tumuaki (x3 Directors): • Whakaako: Learning & Teaching • Te Punaka Ōwheo: Māori Learner Support • Rakahau Māori: Māori Research • Multiple accountabilities – ELT, mana whenua, community, colleagues, each other.

  5. Te Whakatakotoranga / Structure Governance Strategic Operational

  6. Mana Whakahaere / Strategic OUR STRATEGIC GOALS | Ō MātouWhāika ā-Rautaki • Achieve excellent outcomes for our learners • Lead the way in sustainable practice • Be a responsive Treaty partner in meeting the educational aspirations of mana whenua  • Be a strong and agile organisation • Attract and sustain exceptional staff who make a difference OUR VISION | Ō Mātou Matakite Our people make a better world Kia tū ki tetahi– united in thought, purpose and action OUR MISSION | Ō MātouWhakatakaka Build capability | Realise potential We build the capabilities of individuals, organisations and communities and help them to realise their potential.

  7. Mana Whakahaere / Strategic 2 • Goal 3, Strategic Directions 2021 • Māori Strategic Framework (MSF), a high level roadmap • Kaitohutohu Office • Colleges / Schools / Service Areas report against the MSF • Māori Annual Report

  8. Mana Whakahaere / Strategic 3

  9. Mahitahi/Operational: MSF in action

  10. TOKO Ā-IWI, Ā-WĀNANGA • Strategic, collaborative, mutually beneficial relationships: • Iwi • Māori community • Schools/Kura • Industry • Māori businesses • Other key stakeholders with a vested interest in Māori learner success ‘TEIs are culturally relevant & responsive to Māori’ ‘TEIs understand & respond to the aspirations & needs of Māori’ ‘Tertiary environments are safe & familiar, where Māori feel they belong & are supported to thrive’ • TIKANGA • Māori protocols & values: • Integrated into the institution • Embedded in curriculum & programme design • Strong input & oversight from staff knowledgeable in tikanga • Te Ao Māori integrated into assessment, reinforcing its importance and relevance to learning • HUAKINA TE TATAU O TE WHARE • ‘OPENING THE DOOR TO THE HOUSE’ (barriers & enablers) • Culturally specific learning spaces • Tuakana:Teina, peer mentoring/peer relationships • Relevant programmes that are responsive to learners’ individual holistic needs, supporting them to engage in study alongside other commitments • Māori learners & whānau aware of diverse pathways & tertiary/vocational options, inc. future employment demands • Proactive & accessible provision of key info, advice & support • Collective group learning • AKO • Development of effective teaching and learning strategies • Culturally responsive & inclusive learning environments: • Ako – learning/teaching, co-constructed learning contexts (leaners’ knowledge & experiences are valued & incorporated into teaching & learning), flexible delivery • Whanangatanga – relationships with high expectations • Tangatawhenuatanga – place-based, socio-cultural awareness & knowledge • Manaakitanga – values of integrity, trust, sincerity, equity • Wānanga – communication, problem solving, innovation • Culturally appropriate, learner-centred pastoral care • PŪKENGA • Whole of institution buy-in:governance, leadership, management and operations actively committed to Māori learner success • Staff actively establish relationships with parents & whānau • Teachers are: • Credible, authentic & passionate about what they teach • Suitably qualified & have subject knowledge expertise • Strong communicators • Able to set clear boundaries • Research active (especially if teaching degree & postgraduate programmes) Sources: Doing Better for Māori in Tertiary Settings (Chauvel & Rean, 2012) HeiTauira: Teaching & Learning for Success for Māori in Tertiary Settings (Greenwood & Te Aika, 2009) HeiTokoiteTukunga: Enabling Māori Learner Success (Apanui & Kirikiri, 2015) http://inclusive.tki.org.nz

  11. Contextualising Indigenous Education

  12. Kia ora Thank you

  13. CONTACT US Janine Kapa Deputy Chief Executive, Māori Development/ Kaitohutohu janine.kapa@op.ac.nz M: +64 21 479 495 Ron Bull Tumuaki, Whakaako/Director, Learning & Teaching ron.bull@op.ac.nz M: +64 21 735 873

More Related