Ahakoa he iti: Early Childhood Pedagogies Affirming of Māori Children's Rights to Their Culture
Research Findings: This paper considers the position of tamariki Māori, the indigenous children of Aotearoa (a Māori name for New Zealand), in relation to the impact of colonization on their rights, including a focus on the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the current educational policy arena. It then provides an explication of a Māori perspective of tika and tikanga, Māori rights as enacted through a Māori worldview. We then proceed to offer some illustrations from our recent research projects in Aotearoa New Zealand of ways in which teachers are engaging with tamariki and whānau Māori (Māori children and families) in endeavors that give expression to pedagogical enactment respectful and reflective of tikanga Māori (values and cultural practices). Practice or Policy: It is concluded that there are possibilities for early childhood pedagogies that enable a re-narrativizing of Māori ways of being, knowing, and doing in affirmation of children's rights to identity possibilities sourced in their own tikanga (knowledges and practices that are culturally right). © 2011 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.
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Preferred citation
Rau, C. & Ritchie, J. (2011). Ahakoa he iti: Early Childhood Pedagogies Affirming of Māori Children's Rights to Their Culture. Early Education and Development, 22(5), 795-817. https://doi.org/10.1080/10409289.2011.596459Publisher DOI
Journal title
Early Education and DevelopmentVolume
22Issue
5Publication date
2011-09-01Pagination
795-817Publisher
Informa UK LimitedPublication status
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1040-9289eISSN
1556-6935Language
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