9 research outputs found
Tama Samoa Stories: Experiences and Perceptions of Identity, Belonging and Future Aspirations at Secondary School
This thesis investigates the experiences of twelve strong, articulate and thoughtful tama Samoa (Samoan boys) through their participation in secondary schools and lives outside the classroom and through the stories of others. The study looked at how the students enacted their identities as Samoans, as learners and as young men who are anticipating the future. The study is premised on the view that Pacific identities are fluid, diverse, multi-dimensional and include a range of different perspectives relating to social class, ethnicity, culture and gender. Such a view of identity as complex is not generally taken into consideration in the literature on educational success and achievement of Pacific students in New Zealand.
The study employed a phenomenological qualitative design, using focus groups and semi-structured interviews by talanoa (conversations). As the study involved a group of indigenous tama Samoa, the Samoan faâafaletui method was used. Participants were a group of twelve tama Samoa in three Wellington secondary schools and their twelve nominated persons.
The study found that there are key aspects to making the experiences of tama Samoa positive and successful within the secondary school. These include acknowledging tama Samoa and their multiple identities while attending secondary school; supporting the development of a sense of belonging through everyday interactions with peers and teachers, and affirming the belief by tama Samoa that secondary school socialisation serves to help them make future decisions.
This study argues that the experiences of tama Samoa are deeply embedded within wider social, economic and political trends. Indeed, their âvoicesâ are shaped in part by these broader forces that construct and represent them as being historically âdisadvantagedâ and socio-economically âunderserved.â Further, this study advocates for the diverse voices of tama Samoa, along with their experiences, stories, hopes, aspirations and dreams to be brought to light and placed alongside the official accounts of Pacific âdisadvantageâ to enable more balanced critical discourses taking place.
It is hoped that this study will offer further insights into the experiences of tama Samoa in the New Zealand secondary school context, from which valuable knowledge is derived to inform and support schools in improving the New Zealand secondary school experiences of Samoan adolescent boys
Policy for enhancing Pasifika learner achievement in New Zealand: Supports and challenges
Values understood to be fundamentally important across Pacific groups are central to New Zealand education policy focussed on enhancing school learning of Pasifika students. To explore teacher perceptions of three of these values (respect, service, leadership), interviews with primary and secondary teachers were collected and analysed and their lessons observed. Findings indicate policy implementation is challenged by a lack of deep understanding of Pasifika values amongst many teachers. Implications include that extensive professional development and urgent recruitment of teachers and school leaders with strong knowledge of Pasifika communities are needed to improve achievement opportunities for Pasifika learners and facilitate policy implementation.Os valores entendidos como fundamentalmente importantes em todos os grupos do PacĂfico sĂŁo centrais para as polĂticas educacionais da Nova ZelĂąndia focada na melhoria da aprendizagem escolar dos alunos Pasifika. Para explorar as percepçÔes dos professores sobre trĂȘs desses valores (respeito, serviço, liderança), foram recolhidos e analisados dados atravĂ©s de entrevistas com professores do ensino primĂĄrio e secundĂĄrio e observação de aulas. Os resultados indicam que a implementação de polĂticas Ă© desafiada pela falta de compreensĂŁo profunda, entre muitos professores, sobre os valores Pasifika. As implicaçÔes do estudo destacam que para melhorar as oportunidades de sucesso para os alunos Pasifika e facilitar a implementação de polĂticas Ă© necessĂĄrio o desenvolvimento profissional extenso e o recrutamento urgente de professores e lĂderes escolares com forte conhecimento das comunidades Pasifika
Tama Samoa: Exploring Identities in Secondary School
This paper draws on a recent doctoral study which demonstrated ways that Tama Samoa (Samoan boys) enact their identities as Samoans authentically within the New Zealand secondary school context. Identity is complex and is not generally taken into consideration in the literature on education success and achievement of Pacific students in New Zealand. Recognising Pacific identities as being fluid, diverse and multi-dimensional, and engaging with the voices of tama Samoa enables a greater understanding and thus better support for tama Samoa and their educational success within the secondary school context
Exploring understandings of Pacific values in New Zealand educational contexts: Similarities and differences among perceptions
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
Tama Samoa Stories: Experiences and Perceptions of Identity, Belonging and Future Aspirations at Secondary School
This thesis investigates the experiences of twelve strong, articulate and thoughtful tama Samoa (Samoan boys) through their participation in secondary schools and lives outside the classroom and through the stories of others. The study looked at how the students enacted their identities as Samoans, as learners and as young men who are anticipating the future. The study is premised on the view that Pacific identities are fluid, diverse, multi-dimensional and include a range of different perspectives relating to social class, ethnicity, culture and gender. Such a view of identity as complex is not generally taken into consideration in the literature on educational success and achievement of Pacific students in New Zealand.
The study employed a phenomenological qualitative design, using focus groups and semi-structured interviews by talanoa (conversations). As the study involved a group of indigenous tama Samoa, the Samoan faâafaletui method was used. Participants were a group of twelve tama Samoa in three Wellington secondary schools and their twelve nominated persons.
The study found that there are key aspects to making the experiences of tama Samoa positive and successful within the secondary school. These include acknowledging tama Samoa and their multiple identities while attending secondary school; supporting the development of a sense of belonging through everyday interactions with peers and teachers, and affirming the belief by tama Samoa that secondary school socialisation serves to help them make future decisions.
This study argues that the experiences of tama Samoa are deeply embedded within wider social, economic and political trends. Indeed, their âvoicesâ are shaped in part by these broader forces that construct and represent them as being historically âdisadvantagedâ and socio-economically âunderserved.â Further, this study advocates for the diverse voices of tama Samoa, along with their experiences, stories, hopes, aspirations and dreams to be brought to light and placed alongside the official accounts of Pacific âdisadvantageâ to enable more balanced critical discourses taking place.
It is hoped that this study will offer further insights into the experiences of tama Samoa in the New Zealand secondary school context, from which valuable knowledge is derived to inform and support schools in improving the New Zealand secondary school experiences of Samoan adolescent boys
Policy for enhancing Pasifika learner achievement in New Zealand: Supports and challenges
No description supplie
Exploring understandings of Pacific values in New Zealand educational contexts: Similarities and differences among perceptions
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 developmen
âWeâre not the hottest ethnicityâ: Pacific scholars and the cultural politics of New Zealand universities
Academic labour markets around the world are increasingly globalised and tied to transnational circuits of neoliberal capital. Universities in New Zealand are closely aligned with these trends and an academic labour force has developed over time that reflects these economic flows and currents. This labour force is characterised by an exceptionally high number of multinational academic staff, many of whom contribute to research and inquiry aimed at maintaining and broadening the influence of their institutions abroad. Pacific faculty, however, experience the micro-geographies of New Zealand universities in different ways from other migrant scholars, especially those who hail from the global North. They are rarely included in academic âprestige economiesâ or elite scholarly networks and are often isolated in their academic departments. This paper draws on a study about the experiences of senior Pacific academics in Aotearoa New Zealand and explores how they formulate pan-Pacific solidarities within the neoliberal and settler-colonial milieu of higher education. We focus on the often fraught dynamics of encounters between Pacific scholars, white academic elites and indigenous MÄori colleagues as they map academic identities on to institutional space