posted on 2021-02-26, 02:13authored byRobin Averill, Ali GlasgowAli Glasgow, Fuapepe Rimoni
Case studies exploring how educational policies can help teachers serve
learners disadvantaged through cultural marginalization are urgently
needed to inform education systems internationally. The study reported here
explored perceptions of Pacific cultural values at the heart of education
policy in New Zealand that were intended to improve opportunities of
learners with Pacific heritage. Participants included early childhood,
primary, secondary, and tertiary teachers of Pacific and non-Pacific
heritage. Data included interviews and teaching observations. Results
indicate that the Pacific values can be more deeply felt, understood, and
enacted by Pacific teachers than their non-Pacific counterparts. Results are
discussed in relation to tenets of culturally sustaining pedagogy and aspects
of the Pacific-based Fonofale model. Implications of this work include that
initial and in-service teacher education must assist teachers to develop
working understandings of values as they are felt and experienced by policy
target groups. This study contributes to the literature by discussing how a
culturally-embedded model can be a useful tool towards ensuring teachers
can understand cultural nuances inherent within educational policy and
align their practice with these.
Keywords: policy; cultural values; Pacific nations; teacher perspectives;
initial teacher education; teacher professional development
History
Preferred citation
Averill, R., Glasgow, A. & Rimoni, F. (2020). Exploring understandings of Pacific values in New Zealand educational contexts: Similarities and differences among perceptions. The International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives.
Journal title
The International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives