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  2. Te Whāriki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Te_Whāriki

    Te Whāriki is a bi-cultural curriculum that sets out four broad principles, a set of five strands, and goals for each strand.It does not prescribe specific subject-based lessons, rather it provides a framework for teachers and early childhood staff (kaiako) to encourage and enable children in developing the knowledge, skills, attitudes, learning dispositions to learn how to learn.

  3. Mātauranga Māori - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mātauranga_Māori

    Mātauranga Māori as a phrase became popular in the 1980s after being adopted by the New Zealand Government and in tertiary education. The term became useful in part due to the Treaty of Waitangi claims process, which included requests for the protection of traditional knowledge. [5] Kaupapa Māori is the foundation or principles of Māori ...

  4. Aotearoa New Zealand's histories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aotearoa_New_Zealand's...

    Leading up to Waitangi Day 2019, history teachers called for "compulsory teaching of New Zealand's Māori and colonial history in schools", prompting responses from Chris Hipkin that the Education Ministry was working on projects to address this, and Kelvin Davis, associate minister of education and Minister for Māori Crown Relations, who said ...

  5. Native schools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_schools

    The idea that the Maori would soon be absorbed into the pakeha population was one stultifying cause, and another was the lust for examination results inherent in a system run by ex-teachers and easily communicated to parents and the public. The most urgent reform in the education of the Maori is to restore and preserve the Maori language.

  6. Hauora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hauora

    Diagram of a whare, named with domains of Hauora.. Hauora is a Māori philosophy of health and well-being unique to New Zealand. [1]It helps schools be educated and prepared for what students are about to face in life.

  7. Toi moko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toi_moko

    [1]: 4–5 The demand for firearms was such that tribes carried out raids on their neighbours to acquire more heads to trade for them. While most early toi moko sold to Europeans were slain warriors, eventually demand from European traders outstripped supply, so the heads of slaves and prisoners were tattooed (though with meaningless motifs ...

  8. FACT CHECK: Was A Vote In New Zealand Parliament ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/fact-check-vote-zealand-parliament...

    Verdict: False. The Māori’s delayed the bill’s first reading, and didn’t affect voting of it. Fact Check: Members of Parliament in New Zealand representing the Maori people, labeled as Te ...

  9. Māori people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Māori_people

    The Māori King Movement, called the Kīngitanga [v] in Māori, is a Māori movement that arose among some of the Māori iwi (tribes) of New Zealand in the central North Island in the 1850s, to establish a role similar in status to that of the monarch of the British colonists, as a way of halting the alienation of Māori land. [105]