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Wellbeing Learnings from Pandemic Pedagogies in Aotearoa New Zealand

journal contribution
posted on 2024-01-02, 02:37 authored by Jenny RitchieJenny Ritchie
This paper discusses data from a survey of New Zealand teachers conducted in 2020 during the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic. It considers this data in the light of a series of contexts: Te Tiriti o Waitangi; social inequalities particularly in relation to the impacts of colonisation and neoliberal social and economic policies on Māori; the New Zealand government’s commitment to wellbeing; Te Ara Waiora, a Māori model of wellbeing utilised by the New Zealand Treasury; and the status of the teaching profession in Aotearoa New Zealand. Using data from the teachers’ responses to the survey, it outlines ways in which wellbeing was prioritised by teachers during these early months of the pandemic, when teachers were suddenly required to pivot to online teaching. It argues that the wellbeing values as espoused in te ao Māori, a Māori worldview, and those articulated by teachers provide inspiration for a pathway beyond the privations of the pandemic.

History

Preferred citation

Ritchie, J. (2023). Wellbeing Learnings from Pandemic Pedagogies in Aotearoa New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 58(1), 109-132. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40841-023-00278-3

Journal title

New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies

Volume

58

Issue

1

Publication date

2023-01-01

Pagination

109-132

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication status

Published online

Contribution type

Article

Online publication date

2023-02-28

ISSN

0028-8276

eISSN

2199-4714

Language

en

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