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MĀORI, NEW MIGRANTS & IMPLICATIONS FOR NEW ZEALAND UNIVERSITIES

MĀORI, NEW MIGRANTS & IMPLICATIONS FOR NEW ZEALAND UNIVERSITIES. COUNCIL - SLT MEETING 30 JUNE 2011. Māori, New Migrants and Implications for NZ Universities. New Zealand in the globe Demographic Trends Five Challenges Two-way voyaging Massey University – leading the way (again).

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MĀORI, NEW MIGRANTS & IMPLICATIONS FOR NEW ZEALAND UNIVERSITIES

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  1. MĀORI, NEW MIGRANTS & IMPLICATIONS FOR NEW ZEALAND UNIVERSITIES COUNCIL - SLT MEETING 30 JUNE 2011

  2. Māori, New Migrants and Implications for NZ Universities New Zealand in the globe Demographic Trends Five Challenges Two-way voyaging Massey University – leading the way (again)

  3. Aotearoa New Zealand

  4. Ancient and Not-so-Ancient Waterways Ancient waterways 17th, 18th, 19th century waterways

  5. 21st Century Airways

  6. Exploring the Future NZ Demographic Transitions 1,000,000 800,000 – 22% 6m 5m 4.37m 4m Projected rates of increase 1.4% from 2001 – 2007 1.0 from 2007-2011 0.7% to 2020s 0.4% to 2040s 3m 2m 1m 2010 2015 2020

  7. Ethnic Diversity in NZ

  8. Māori Demographic Transitions 1,000,000 800,000 – 22% 500,000 565,329 – 15% (Median age 22.7 yrs - 2006) 200,000 45,000 100,000 2050 1800 1900 2000

  9. Changing Age Structure (NZ)Median Age of Population Now Median age 36.5

  10. Demographic Trends – Median Age Ethnic Groups 50 European (39 44yrs) 45 Asian (28 36yrs) 40 35 Maori (23 26yrs) 30 Pacific (21 24yrs) 25 20 2006 2021

  11. Some Implications Maori, Pasifika, and Asian children will make up a growing proportion of the school age population There will be increasing demands for tertiary education that is relevant and accessible to a range of students for whom English and the English traditions are not embedded in cultural heritage There will be parallel demands for Maori, Pasifika, and Asian teachers , educational administrators, academics, & researchers.

  12. The Global VillageShared Problems Global climate change Global inequalities Global colonisation Global over-population & global food shortages Global competitiveness

  13. The First ChallengeRegional Responsibilities • To harness the collective knowledge and skills so that the Asia Pacific region can advance in a cooperative and integrated way in order to face the complex challenges ahead. • Regional awareness, skills & knowledge relevant to the wider region will be needed

  14. The Second Challenge • To be part of the Asia Pacific regional community while retaining a Kiwi tradition • Indigenous heritage • British heritage • Pacific heritage • Asian heritage

  15. The Third Challenge • To maximise learning opportunities so that teaching & research: • Become relevant to diverse populations • Contribute to local/national problem solving • Reflect the aspirations of community/population/ society • Encompass multiple systems of knowledge • Are future-focussed

  16. The Fourth Challenge • To value indigeneity while fostering a multi-cultural approach • Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UN 2007) • Post-settlement development • WAI 262 (2011)

  17. The Fifth Challenge • To create a society where new settlers can feel committed and valued, retain their own languages and cultures, and be part of the growing Kiwi tradition

  18. Some Challenges for Pasifika • Pacific Island States • Climate change • Natural disasters • Weakening economies • Depopulation • A large diaspora • Political instability • Pasifika in New Zealand • Cultural diffusion • socio-economic stress • Dual commitments • (to NZ, to Islands) • Multiple languages, • cultures, religions • Marginal participation • in society

  19. Some Challenges for Māori in the Post-settlement Era 2010 - 2035 Sustainable Māori Economies & Positive Whānau Development 1984 – 2009 Positive Māori Development

  20. Challenges for Māori Maximising Resources • Post-settlement assets - • adding value • Economic • Cultural • Human • Wise investments • Capability in Governance, management, financial literacy • Natural resource management • Agriscience, Agribusiness, Fisheries, Forestry, Energy • Metrics • Cultural values & economic goals • Positive Whānau Development • Education, te reo, health, technology, work-ready

  21. The Five Challenges • harness the collective knowledge and skills so that the • Asia Pacific region can advance in a cooperative and • integrated way • be part of the Asia Pacific regional community while • retaining a Kiwi tradition • create an educational system that has national and • international benefits • value indigeneity while fostering a multi-cultural NZ • create a society where new settlers can feel committed • and valued, retain their own languages and cultures, and • be part of the growing Kiwi tradition

  22. The New Demographic: University Challenges • Relevance for diverse populations • curriculum, research methodologies, case studies, languages • Contributions to community/national problem solving • Translational research, whole-of-university engagement, partnerships, global reach • Engagement that is inclusive of the new New Zealand • with migrant communities, Iwi, Pacific leadership, governments • Campus milieu that reflect the demography of NZ • Able to endorse cultural identity and promote inter-ethnic understanding

  23. Massey’s Leadership • First marae in a TEI • Te Kupenga o teMātauranga • First Maori immersion teacher education programme • Te AhoTātairangi • First university Pasifika strategy • Pasifika@Massey • First NZ university campus in Singapore • Food technology

  24. Two-way Voyaging A broader student base, a more diverse curriculum, and an innovative research programme will provide avenues for wider engagement at global levels • Māori@Massey gateways to Indigenous populations • Pasifika@Massey gateways to Pacific nations • Asia@Massey gateways to Asia

  25. Three ScenariosMassey Leads (again) • Maori Indigenous Leadership • Pasifika Economic Transformation • Entry to Asian Economies and Education

  26. Scenario OneMāori Indigenous Leadership • By 2014 MU had an undisputed reputation as a world leader in indigenous health research and the development of translational research models relevant to indigenous communities • By 2016 bilaterally funded research agreements established with MU and indigenous academics in British Columbia, Hawaii, Australia, Samoa, and Columbia • In 2020 the UN Indigenous Peoples Forum invited MU to participate in the Leaders Forum of the WIHP (World’s Indigenous Health Programme)

  27. Scenario TwoPacific Economic Transformation • In 2012 a joint agreement between MFAT and MU led to the establishment of the Centre for Pacific Economic Transformation and Social Development on the Albany Campus • By 2016 MU was leading the inter-university Pasifika Alliance (all NZ and 3 Pacific universities ) which provided high quality teaching and research relevant to Pacific futures. Sites of delivery within the Pacific were key features of the Alliance. • In 2020 the Pacific Nations Forum endorsed a comprehensive report from the Alliance which was to become the basis for an inter-state Pacific development policy.

  28. Scenario ThreeAsian Economies and Education • By 2014 the increasing numbers of Asian postgraduate students in business and science at MU had generated a network of academic scholars at MU and in the home countries • In 2016 the network was formalised with the establishment of MANA (Massey Asia Networked Alliance). The network now included Massey alumni working in prestigious Asian universities. • In 2020 the Shanghai Global Enterprise University, widely regarded as a world leader, agreed that members of MANA would have priority entry into advanced programmes

  29. Future Pathways

  30. The Main Points • New Zealand is part of the Asia Pacific Region • The student body will increasingly reflect the Region’s demography • Global reach and NZ priorities need not be incompatible • Universities will be challenged to demonstrate: • Relevance to students from multiple cultures & ethnicities • Contributions to solving regional problems • Campuses that facilitate learning for all students • Models for inter-cultural learning and inter-ethnic understanding • A diverse student body will open new pathways across the region that will benefit NZ and NZ universities

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