Post on 04-Nov-2014
description
A Professional e-Learning Approach to Working with Māori &
Pasifika Students
Janelle Riki, Moana Timoko, Anaru White and Togi Lemanu
Get Tweeting!
@jayeriki @MoanaTimoko @AnaruWhite @TogiLemanu
#belmāoripasifika#ULearn12
Blended e-LearningPLD Providers for the Ministry of Education.
Māori and English Medium, New Zealand wide
www.tetoitupu.org
www.tetoitupu.org
Kaupapa• Karakia and Mihimihi• Blended e-Learning• Māori learners• From PROfessional to BROfessional• Pasifika learners• Blended e-Learning tools to engage and
support Māori & Pasifika Learners• Takeaways
www.tetoitupu.org
www.tetoitupu.org
What is a Blended Learning Community?
• opportunities to build and develop on what we know already
• synchronous and asynchronous components
What it is not:Geographically boundDelivery orientated
What it is:It is actively inclusive of all the people who have an interest
in the learners’ development
www.tetoitupu.org
What do we mean by ‘blended’?
“Blended learning systems combine face-to-face instruction with computer-mediated instruction”(Graham, p.5, 2006)
Focus is not the technologiesBut the way they are integrated ‘blended’Effectively designed learner-focused experience
www.tetoitupu.org
www.tetoitupu.org
Key Characteristics• Offering ubiquitous opportunities and interaction
• Across different spaces, from physical to virtual
• With and across time constraints
• Across a rich range of media
www.tetoitupu.org
www.tetoitupu.org
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Formal Education for early Māori• Roles and responsibility (hapū)• Natural capabilities - Māori Potential• Brave, bold, independent• Observation• Participation• Assessment in real life contexts for a real purpose for an audience who had a vested interest, and with whom they had genuine, caring relationships
www.tetoitupu.org
Some scary Statistics• 18% of all Māori students will not have obtained basic
literacy and numeracy skills by age 10 compared with 4% of Pākehā students.
• 34% of all Māori students will leave secondary school without a qualification compared with 13% of Pākehā students.
• 16% of all Māori students will become disengaged from any of education, employment or training by age 17 compared with 6% of Pākehā students.
www.tetoitupu.org
• Poor• Hungry• Tired and or sick• Inadequate, overcrowded housing• Parents don’t value education• Parents don’t do homework with their children or
come into school• Poor behaviour• Lazy• Don’t value education – it’s cooler to fail• Are not as smart as other kids
www.tetoitupu.org
Māori and Pasifika students are not failing in our education
system,Our education system is failing
them!If you have one Māori or Pasifika student who is consistently failing in your school, your school is failing Māori and Pasifika
students.
www.tetoitupu.org
A BROfessional
e-Learning Approach
www.tetoitupu.org
A PROfessional way to explain BROfessionalism
• Consider a BROfessional approach when working with Māori learners
• How does it align to ‘Something Māori’?• Ways of our tūpuna
– Use of analogies/parallels– Use of metaphor– Really good story tellers
www.tetoitupu.org
BRO• BRO – Whanaungatanga
– Bro – Whanaunga– Term of endearment– Cuz– Breaking down barriers– Sense of belonging – being part of
www.tetoitupu.org
A BROfessional approach
•B Blending•R Relationships•O Open
www.tetoitupu.org
B Blending• Blending – implies something has to be done• Blend of what?
– Blend of approaches– Blend of strategies– Blend of the good stuff• Me kīnaki – To mix/stir• Me kōmiri – To sort
www.tetoitupu.org
R Relationships
• Establishing relationships
• Receptive - a relationship can not begin without people being receptive
• Links – whanaungatanga / te hononga
www.tetoitupu.org
O Open • Open to ideas• Removing barriers – Being overt • If you give, you give it all/pulling out and putting in• Opens up avenues – Allows access• Acknowledging who your students are - Where &
Who they come from – Not just about the what• Sharing a little about yourself – Why?
www.tetoitupu.org
A BROfessional e-Learning Approach
e - Learning
www.tetoitupu.org
A BROfessional e-Learning Approach
Learning
eĀkonga
Kaiako
www.tetoitupu.org
A BROfessional e-Learning Approach
Learning
Rehutai Hukatai
www.tetoitupu.org
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Te Mangōroa:
• www.vln.school.nz• Te Mangōroa Discussion post
www.tetoitupu.org
Connecting Home & School:• http://www.vln.school.nz• Connect with our communities with – and about –
Information Communication Technologies (ICTs)
www.tetoitupu.org
“O le tagata ma lona fa’asinomaga”
Identity,language and culture
www.tetoitupu.org
Relationships: Va Fealoaloa’iPEOPLE
TIME
NATURE
www.tetoitupu.org
Relationships with People
‘It is important to consider the cultural background of children and their parents in relation to how feelings and emotions are
expressed’. (Lisa Terreni and Judi McCallum)
www.tetoitupu.org
Relationships with Time
‘…an understanding about orientation to time is important particularly when
entering into cultural contexts that are different from their own.’
(Lisa Terreni and Judith McCallum)
www.tetoitupu.org
How cultures relate to nature and the different forces created by natural events also determine
certain beliefs and behaviours. (Trompenaars and Hampden
Turner, 1998)
How cultures relate to nature and the different forces created by natural events also determine
certain beliefs and behaviours. (Trompenaars and Hampden
Turner, 1998)
Relationships with NatureRelationships with Nature
www.tetoitupu.org
What’s the impact on Pasifika learners?
www.tetoitupu.org
Pasifika Resources /Links
• MOE Pasifika & ESOL Resources• Tongan Language Resources• Victoria University - Samoan Language Re
sources• CORE Pasifika Excellence Group• TKI Pasifika Education Community
www.tetoitupu.org
“ It’s a shared responsibility!It’s a shared
responsibility!
“It takes a whole village to
raise a child
“It takes a whole village to
raise a child
www.tetoitupu.org
What are Māori tamariki typically good at, strengths, potential?
• Sports and Physical Activity– Co-ordination, competition, team-work, balance, fine
motor skills• The Arts: visual, drama, music
– Expression, creativity, culture, performance• Kapahaka
– Rhyme, repetition, practice, beat, rhythm, Te Reo Māori, tikanga Māori, Māori World
www.tetoitupu.org
Māori Educational Success as Māori Celebrate and excel in Te Ao Māori• Te Reo Māori: kaikōrero, wero, karanga• Whānau, iwi/hapū, whakapapa• Kapahaka, Mau Rakau, Te Reo Kori• Tikanga Māori: practices, karakia, waiata• Kawa Māori / protocols• Ngā Toi / Arts• Kai: traditional kai gathering and preparing methods• Place-based education
www.tetoitupu.org
What is Digistore?
Learning Objects
Digitised Items
Digitised item
s
http://digistore.tki.org.nz/ec/p/home
www.tetoitupu.org
The Māori resources catalogue
Step 3Click on the image
Step 2Go to the Māori related resources page
Step 1Go to the Digistore wiki
http://digistore.wikispaces.comhttp://digistore.wikispaces.com
www.tetoitupu.org
Alternatives to pen to paper!• Track changes: available in MSWord and Pages• Natural Reader: Free text to speech software• Etherpad: Collaborative writing pad• Literacy Learning Progressions: Blended e-Learning tools
to support the Literacy Learning Progressions
www.tetoitupu.org
Online tools & Websites• Wall Wisher: online brainstorm with stickies• Storybird: online story book writing• Vocaroo: online voice recordings• Animoto: great for visual mihi• Te Mangōroa: links out to all Māori MOE links &
resources. Also has great snapshots of learning.• Wicked: interactive Māori games for learning• Kōrero Māori: some great resource booklets
www.tetoitupu.org
Ipad/Ipod Apps• Ibooks Author: write and publish your own books• Sock puppets: create conversations in Te Reo• Hika: app to learn Te Reo Māori• Te Reo Dictionary online: great online dictionary• E-Wai: Te Wānanga-o-Raukawa waiata• Te Pataka pukapuka: Māori readers for tamariki• Kaitiaki: Bilingual Interactive game to enhance literacy
skills
www.tetoitupu.org
Your Takeaway Order…• VLN Group: Blended e-Learning for Māori and Pasifika learners
– Session PowerPoint with links– Information on the Blended e-Learning PLD programme for schools– Other great links and resources– Great discussion and resource sharing– Continually updated– Contact details
VLN Group
Blended e-Learning for Māori and Pasifika Learners
Janelle Riki: janelle.riki@core-ed.org
Anaru White: anaru.white@core-ed.org
Moana Timoko: moana.timoko@core-ed.org
Togi Lemanu: togi.lemanu@core-ed.org