Becoming Educultural: Te whakawhitinga o nga matauranga.

Authors

  • Angus Macfarlane University of Waikato

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54322/kairaranga.v7i2.58

Keywords:

Culture, ecological perspective, education, Maori culture, tertiary education.

Abstract

In every profession, there comes a time when it is important to stop and evaluate the progress that has been made and to determine the changes that will be necessary to engage in new times and to meet new demands, The profession of tertiary education is no exception. In a period of rapid change many solutions are offered about what it takes to sustain effort in order to achieve success. Some of these solutions - for the acquisition of quality in education- insist on precision, rigor, consistency, and replicability. This paper purports that such qualities are of high value, yet appear incomplete if certain sociocultural elements are not taken into account. It is argued that we might better unravel our perceptions, attitudes, and beliefs about education, when we draw from the historical and social contexts that have affected our worldview. These historical and social contexts might well be the tools that help to shape the values of learning, referred to in this paper as becoming educultural.

Author Biography

  • Angus Macfarlane, University of Waikato

    Dr Angus Macfarlane is of the Te Arawa tribe. The thrust of
    his research is concerned with the exploration of culturally
    responsive pedagogies. In 2003 he was the inaugural Senior
    Research Fellow for NZCER. In 2004 he was a recipient of
    Te Kohu Kairangi, presented at the National Maori Academic
    Excellence Awards. He holds advisory positions on the
    government's steering committee for Special Education and
    on the National Coordination Contract for Gifted Education.

Published

01-07-2006

Issue

Section

Vol 7 Iss 2

How to Cite

Becoming Educultural: Te whakawhitinga o nga matauranga. (2006). Kairaranga, 7(2), 41-44. https://doi.org/10.54322/kairaranga.v7i2.58