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2016 | 7 | 1 | 25 – 37

Article title

DIVERSE COMPLEXITIES, COMPLEX DIVERSITIES: RESISTING ‘NORMAL SCIENCE’ IN PEDAGOGICAL AND RESEARCH METHODOLOGIES. A PERSPECTIVE FROM AOTEAROA (NEW ZEALAND)

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
This paper offers an overview of complexities of the contexts for education in Aotearoa, which include the need to recognise and include Māori (Indigenous) perspectives, but also to extend this inclusion to the context of increasing ethnic diversity. These complexities include the situation of worsening disparities between rich and poor which disproportionately position Māori and those from Pacific Island backgrounds in situations of poverty. It then offers a brief critique of government policies before providing some examples of models that resist ‘normal science’ categorisations. These include: the Māori values underpinning the effective teachers’ profile of the Kotahitanga project and of the Māori assessment model for early childhood education; the dispositions identified in a Samoan model for assessing young children’s learning; and the approach developed for assessing Māori children’s literacy and numeracy within schools where Māori language is the medium of instruction. These all models position learning within culturally relevant frames that are grounded in non-Western onto-epistemologies which include spiritual, cultural, and collective aspirations.

Year

Volume

7

Issue

1

Pages

25 – 37

Physical description

Contributors

author
  • Victoria University of Wellington, Faculty of Education, Aotearoa, New Zealand

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-ba25b45c-0064-4134-93ef-b2485b066c53
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