他Vaka Moana -导航Māori和帕西菲卡学生成功通过合作研究奖学金

Q1 Social Sciences
’Ema Wolfgramm-Foliaki, Hinekura Smith
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引用次数: 5

摘要

本文介绍了He Vaka Moana,它已经在国际和地方层面进行了测试和评估。他Vaka Moana是一个实力为基础的模式,学术奖学金是由大洋原则和方法框架。作者将这个模型建立在连接和维持我们Mäori和帕西菲卡人(即The Moana- nui- a- Kiwa)的基础上。我们从共同的祖先历史中汲取经验,在浩瀚的太平洋上航行,用土著的方法和方式建造船只,成功地到达目的地。我们的合作借鉴了汤加谚语“pikipiki hama kae vave manava”的丰富知识和意象,这句谚语指的是当船队在海上与汹涌的海浪和天气作斗争时,将独木舟绑在一起交换人员和资源。在He Vaka Moana中,这个令人回味的大洋隐喻指导了各院系的教学倡导者如何有目的地聚集在一起,共同研究现有的实践,并开发创新的方法来解决机构的战略优先事项:Mäori和Pasifika学生的成功。在《He Vaka Moana》一书中,我们从具体和政治的角度探讨了促进Mäori和帕西菲卡学生在高等教育中取得成功的方法,探索有效的方法;成功是如何定义的,由谁来定义;作为一所大学,我们如何倾听(或不倾听)土著故事;以及大洋研究对我们的教与学带来的不同。我们的议程是振兴土著方法和知识,以改变高等教育机构对土著学习者作出反应的方式。采用我们自己的土著方法强调了我们存在、思考、说话和行为的文化方式。我们希望展示我们的存在方式和知识如何使我们能够重新认识我们是谁,更重要的是,如何规划我们作为大洋洲公民的集体和理想的未来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
He Vaka Moana – Navigating Māori and Pasifika student success through a collaborative research fellowship
This article introduces He Vaka Moana, which has been tested and evaluated at international and local levels. He Vaka Moana is a strength- based model of academic fellowship that is framed by Oceanic principles and methodologies. The authors base this model on what connects and sustains us as Mäori and Pasifika people—that is, Te Moana- nui- a- Kiwa. We draw from our shared ancestral history of navigating the vast Pacific Ocean on purposefully built vessels using Indigenous methods and ways of being to successfully reach our destinations. Our fellowship draws on the rich knowledge and imagery of a Tongan saying “pikipiki hama kae vave manava ” , which refers to lashing canoes together to exchange people and resources when a fleet is out on the ocean battling the swells and weather. This evocative Oceanic metaphor guides how, in He Vaka Moana, champions of teaching and learning across faculties purposefully come together to work collaboratively to examine existing practice and develop innovative ways for addressing issues of strategic priority to the institution: Mäori and Pasifika students’ success. In He Vaka Moana, we look specifically and politically at ways to advance the success of Mäori and Pasifika students in higher education, exploring what works; how success is defined and by whom; how, as a university, we listen (or fail to listen) to Indigenous stories; and the difference Oceanic- based research makes for our teaching and learning. Our agenda is revitalising Indigenous methodologies and knowledges to transform higher educational institutions’ ways of responding to our Indigenous learners. Employing our own Indigenous methodologies has emphasised our cultural ways of being, thinking, speaking and behav-ing. We wish to demonstrate how our ways of being and knowledge allow us to reclaim who we are and, more importantly, to chart our collective and desired future as citizens of Oceania.
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来源期刊
MAI Journal
MAI Journal Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
2.10
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