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1
Remapping the assessment landscape: primary teachers reconstructing assessment in self-managing schools
Hill, Mary. - : The University of Waikato, 2022
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2
Colouring in the White Spaces: Reclaiming Cultural Identity in Whitestream Schools
Milne, Beverley Ann. - : University of Waikato, 2013
Abstract: If we look at a child’s colouring book, before it has any colour added to it, we think of the page as blank. It’s actually not blank, it’s white. That white background is just “there” and we don’t think much about it. Not only is the background uniformly white, the lines are already in place and they dictate where the colour is allowed to go. When children are young, they don’t care where they put the colours, but as they get older they colour in more and more cautiously. They learn about the place of colour and the importance of staying within the pre-determined boundaries and expectations. This thesis argues that this is the setting for our mainstream, or what I have called, whitestream New Zealand schools — that white background is the norm. When we talk about multiculturalism and diversity what we are really referring to is the colour of the children, or their difference from that white norm, and how they don’t fit perfectly inside our lines. If the colour of the space doesn’t change schools are still in the business of assimilation, relegating non-white children to the margins, no matter how many school reform initiatives, new curricula, strategic plans, or mandated standards we implement. What the schools in this study have tried to do is change the colour of the space – so that the space fits the children and they don’t have to constantly adjust to fit in. New Zealand’s education system has been largely silent on the topic of whiteness and the Eurocentric nature of our schooling policy and practice. However, when I talk to senior Māori and Pasifika ‘warrior-scholars” in Te Whānau o Tupuranga and Clover Park Middle School about “white spaces” they have encountered in their schooling experience they can identify them all too easily. “White spaces,” they explain, are anything you accept as “normal” for Māori – when it’s really not, any situation that prevents, or works against you “being Māori” or who you are, and that requires you to “be” someone else and leave your beliefs behind. White spaces are spaces that allow you to require less of yourself and that reinforce stereotypes and negative ideas about Māori. Most telling of all was the comment from a Māori student that goes straight to the root of the problem, “White spaces are everywhere,” she said, “even in your head.” This thesis describes the 25 year journey of two schools and their community’s determination to resist and reject alienating school environments in favour of a relevant culturally-located, bilingual learning model based in a secure cultural identity, stable positive relationships, and aroha (authentic caring and love). While the research design is a case study, in terms of western, “white space” academic tradition, it is also a story in terms of kaupapa Māori and critical race methodology. More importantly, it is a counter-story that chronicles the efforts of these two schools to step outside education’s “white spaces” to create new space. This counter-story is juxtaposed against pervasive, deficit-driven whitestream explanations of “achievement gaps” and the “long tail” of Māori and Pasifika “under-achievement” in New Zealand schools. In the process of this research the focus shifted from how could Māori and Pasifika learners develop secure cultural identities in mainstream schools, to examining what barriers exist in schools that prevent this from happening already? As these issues became clear the language of the thesis shifted accordingly; “developing” a cultural identity was reframed as a reclamation of educational sovereignty — the absolute right to “be Māori” or “be Pasifika” in school — and “mainstream” schooling became better understood as the “whitestream.” The study hopes to contribute to the journey other schools might take to identify and name their own white spaces, and to make learning equitable for indigenous and minoritised learners.
Keyword: Counter-storytelling; Critical pedagogy; Critical Race Theory; Cultural identity; educational sovereignty; Indigenous knowledge; Kaupapa Maori; Maori education; New Zealand education system; Pasifika education; Whiteness
URL: https://hdl.handle.net/10289/7868
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3
Creating peaceful and effective schools through a culture of care
Cavanagh, Tom; Macfarlane, Angus; Glynn, Ted. - : Taylor & Francis, 2013
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4
What is the role of English transition in Māori-medium education?
Hill, Richard Kenneth. - : University of Waikato, 2010
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5
Whakarongo mai!: Transformative teaching to support Māori identity and success in a mainstream school
Gilgen, Renée. - : University of Waikato, 2010
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6
Tā Pikitia Hei Āwhina Kōrero Collaborative Drawing and Storying
Kururangi, Aorere Helen Mary. - : The University of Waikato, 2008
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7
Record of oral language : observing changes in the acquisition of language structures ; a guide for teaching
McNaughton, Tony; Gill, Malcolm; Glynn, Ted. - Auckland : Heinemann Education, 2007
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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8
From Literacy in M#x0101ori to Biliteracy in M#x0101ori and English: A Community and School Transition Programme
In: International journal of bilingual education and bilingualism. - Abingdon : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 8 (2005) 5, 433-454
OLC Linguistik
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9
Bilingual/immersion education in Aotearoa, New Zealand
May, Stephen; Hill, Richard; Rau, Cath. - Clevedon : Multilingual Matters, 2005
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10
Responding to the message: Responsive written feedback in a Maori to English transition context
Berryman, Mere; Weiss, Silomiga; Glynn, Ted. - : Wilf Malcolm Institute of Educational Research, The University of Waikato, 2005
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11
Pause Prompt Praise applied to Japanese learners of English
Donald, Stephen; Glynn, Ted; Barnard, Roger. - : Applied Linguistics Association of New Zealand, 2004
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12
Bilingual children's language and literacy development
Tuafuti, Patisepa (Mitarb.); Biederman, Yael (Mitarb.); Elia, Lesley (Mitarb.). - Clevedon : Multilingual Matters, 2003
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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13
Bilingual behaviour checklists: initiating a student, teacher and parent partnership in behaviour management.
Glynn, Ted; Berryman, Mere; Harawir, Wai. - : Faculty of Education, University of Waikato, 2001
BASE
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14
Tatari, tautoko, tauawhi - Hei awhina tamariki ki te panui pukapuka: Some preliminary findings
Glynn, Ted; Rogers, Sonia; Teddy, Nancy. - : Psychology Department, University of Waikato, 1993
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15
Peer tutoring as a context for children learning English as a second language
In: Language and education. - Abingdon : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 3 (1989) 1, 45-55
BLLDB
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