The Post

Maori world, Treaty gaining expression in our classrooms

More work is needed to recognise the place of Maori language and culture in our schools, writes Education Minister Hekia Parata.

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SEVERAL generation­s ago, children who dared to speak te reo Maori at school were cruelly silenced.

The great Nga Puhi leader Sir James Henare, born in 1911, remembered as a schoolboy being sent into the bush to cut a piece of pirita, or supplejack vine, so he could be hit with it for speaking te reo in school grounds.

Thankfully, kids are no longer being silenced in this way. Instead Maori language and culture is being heard and seen more often in the everyday world of the classroom. When I visit schools, I’m often welcomed with a powhiri. I see bilingual signage, I see kids who know everyday Maori words, and I’ve heard many beautifull­y sung waiata.

In these very practical ways, schools are increasing­ly bringing the many layers of the Treaty to life. Our kids are also learning more about the Treaty that this nation was founded on 175 years ago.

We’re seeing parents from all background­s expressing a desire for their children to have more exposure to the Maori language.

Between 2010 and 2014, the number of children learning te reo at school grew 11 per cent, from close to 133,000 children to more than 147,000 children.

That isn’t including those in kura kaupapa and Maori immersion classes, where numbers increased from about 16,000 to almost 18,000 over the same period.

We would like to have more Maori language teachers to meet the demand. We’re working to increase supply with a range of scholarshi­ps and support.

Currently, for example, there are some 600 trainee teachers studying either to be teachers in a Maori immersion setting or to teach te reo in a mainstream school.

Many schools are exploring the ways the Treaty relationsh­ip can be further expressed in education by working harder to connect with Maori whanau, or making sure that they have more of a voice in important decisions in the school.

So far, so encouragin­g. But the Treaty will never be fully meaningful while the education system fails so many of our Maori children.

As has been well-rehearsed, at every stage, the education system is less successful for Maori and Pasifika children and those from low-income families.

Achievemen­t is also influenced by quality teaching, expectatio­ns of performanc­e, school leadership and whanau and parent involvemen­t.

Part of the picture is making it easier for Maori learners to learn as Maori, and supporting schools to offer that.

On a wider front, momentum is building behind the exciting $359 million Investing in Educationa­l Success programme that we announced a year ago.

This approach will benefit all kids by lifting the quality of teaching and leadership in schools and by actively engaging their parents in the setting of learning goals. It’s a long journey from the school days of Sir James, but I believe one he would be heartened.

The Maori world is increasing­ly visible in the classroom.

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