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Pūrongo Rangahau | Project Reports

  • Marginalising Māori Parents: Internship Report

    Internship project Scoping project

    Author: Elizabeth Jurisich Strickett. Supervisors: Associate Professor Helen Moewaka Barnes and Dr Tim McCreanor. This report was written while undertaking a Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga internship with Whāriki, SHORE and Whāriki Research Centre, Massey University.

    Project commenced: 2015
    Health

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    Document
    Marginalising Māori Parents

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  • Networks of support for Māori mental health: The response and recovery of Tangata Whaiora through the Ōtautahi earthquakes

    This research looked at how the 2010/11 earthquakes in Ōtautahi (Christchurch) have affected Māori mental health communities. The research team led by Dr Simon Lambert focused on how the support networks for Tangata Whaiora (a term applied to Māori mental health clients that translates as people seeking health) and their whānau responded and recovered through the disaster.

     

    Project commenced: 2015
    Health

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  • Phonological development in Māori speaking preschoolers: Internship Report

    Internship project

    Author: Joshua Tahana. Supervisor Dr Elaine Ballard This report outlines the background for a study to be undertaken tracking phonological development (speech skills) in Māori for Māori speaking pre-school children. Although there is a substantial body of literature on how children develop speech sounds in English we know nothing about the developmental trajectory in Māori.

    Project commenced: 2015

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    Document
    12-IN-02 Web ready.pdf

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  • Reo Māori ki ngā Rorohiko o te Kura: Internship Report

    Internship project

    Author: Tara Dalley. Supervisor: Dr Te Taka Keegan The aim of this research was to determine the level of awareness and willingness to use software with a te reo Māori interface by the Māori medium education sector.

    Project commenced: 2015
    Education Te Reo

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    Document
    12-IN-04 Web ready .pdf

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  • Te Tupunga Māori Economic Development

    Full project Pae Tawhiti project

    He Mangōpare Amohia: Strategies for Māori Economic Development

    Critical success factors for Māori economic development have been identified in a just released report on the three-year Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga (NPM) research programme – Te Tupunga Māori Economic Development.

    Project commenced: 2015
    Economic Development

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    Document
    He Mangopare Amohia_0.pdf

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  • Communicative Language Teaching for Indigenous languages

    Internship project

    Can communicative language teaching (CLT) help save indigenous languages? This project is a review of literature on CLT and its relevance to indigenous language revitalisation. It forms part of a broader research project to examine the teaching and learning of Māori, Tahitian and Hawai’ian within universities.

    Project commenced: 2014

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    Document
    14INT02 - Internship Report; Communicative Language Teaching

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  • Liberating Psychologies : Māori Moving Forward

    Full project Internship project

    The purpose of this proposal is for interns to: - experience the ethos of the Māori & Psychology Research Unit and a culture of research excellence; - enhance their knowledge of indigenous psychology; the process of indigenising psychology; and the task of energising an indigenous Māori psychology. - engage with the research cycle and be active in generating research ideas and proposals for funding. Interns will be located on campus at the Māori & Psychology Research Unit, University of Waikato and will:

    Project commenced: 2014

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    Document
    Liberating Psychologies_Maori Moving Forward_HJones.pdf
    Document
    Liberating Psychologies_Maori Moving Forward.pdf

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  • Māori values in the workplace

    Internship project

    A survey study conducted in 2012 investigated whether employee perceptions of the extent to which their organisation espoused 5 core Māori values identified in the literature (manaakitanga, wairuatanga, auahatanga, whakawhanaungatanga, and kaitiakitanga), influenced their disposition to engage in helping behaviours at work and feel more committed to the organisation. These relationships were moderated by extent of identification with Māori culture (being Māori vs. identifying as Māori).

    Project commenced: 2014

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    Document
    14INT05 - Monograph Internship UC.pdf

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  • Measuring the restoration of mauri and ecosystem services at Ōkahu Bay

    Internship project

    Ōkahu Bay lies adjacent to Te Whenua Rangatira, occupying a dominant headland near the mouth of the Waitemata Harbour, collectively the ancestral home of Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei.

    Project commenced: 2014
    Economic Development

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    Document
    14INT08 - NPM Report- Okahu Bay - Peter van Kampen .pdf

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  • AlterNative

    An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples is our peer-reviewed interdisciplinary scholarly journal.

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