te huarahi path power point

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Te Huarahi mo te puawaitanga o ngā kura whānau ngatahi o Te Puaha o Waikato

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Page 1: Te huarahi path power point

Te Huarahi mo te puawaitanga

o ngā kura whānau ngatahi o Te Puaha o Waikato

Page 2: Te huarahi path power point
Page 3: Te huarahi path power point
Page 4: Te huarahi path power point
Page 5: Te huarahi path power point
Page 6: Te huarahi path power point

Ngā Moemoea“I see a place where our tamariki are enthusiastic about going to school, happy and confident”

“Where children have great relationships with their teachers”

“Where families are involved in their children’s education”

Page 7: Te huarahi path power point

Ngā Moemoea“More Māori teachers”

“Where tamariki enter school at the same level”

“Where Te Reo Māori me ona tikanga are valued”

“Where everyone understands that education is the key”

Page 8: Te huarahi path power point

Ngā Moemoea

“A place with smooth transitions from early childhood through to high school and onwards”

“Where learning is supported by kaumatua”

“Waka ama challenges”

Page 9: Te huarahi path power point

Ngā Moemoea“Where achievement is expected”

“Strong kapahaka!!!”

“Whanau in paid positions”

“Regular on-going positive education”

“Where our tamariki are proud to be Māori”

Page 10: Te huarahi path power point

Ngā Moemoea

“A place where tamariki are moved from a state of mauri moe to mauri oho”

“Lots of sporting opportunities”

“Where every school offers mainstream, bilingual and total immersion learning environments”

Page 11: Te huarahi path power point

Ngā Moemoea“Holistic learning opportunities”

“A shared understanding of the Māori World View”

“Where our tamariki relate to others with reciprocated comfort and respect”

“Where we foster the creative arts”

Page 12: Te huarahi path power point

Ngā Moemoea“Close relationships between school and marae”

“Where tamariki are encouraged to have big dreams, take risks and ask why”

“Boundary-less-ness”

“Where we celebrate success”

Page 13: Te huarahi path power point

Ngā Moemoea

“Moving from best practice to create new practice”

“Whole community support”

“Where we value family values”

“Leadership opportunities for our tamariki”

Page 14: Te huarahi path power point

Ngā Moemoea“Where our tamariki are resilient, completing all levels of education Y0-12 and onwards”

“Respect for self, others and property”

“Where authentic, reciprocal relationships exist between schools and families”

Page 15: Te huarahi path power point
Page 16: Te huarahi path power point

TimeframeFive Years - 2015

Page 17: Te huarahi path power point
Page 18: Te huarahi path power point

Early Childhood Education

“Early childhood education sets the scene for life - NZEI”

By the year 2015, every 5 year old Māori child in our area would have accessed some form of regular early childhood education.

Page 19: Te huarahi path power point

Whānau Education

‘Whānau have expressed a genuine interest in furthering their own education’

By the year 2015, TH would be offering 8 educational opportunities to the whānau in our area each year.

Page 20: Te huarahi path power point

Celebrating Success

All TH schools would be participating in a celebration of culture in our area.

TH would contribute 8 stories of success per year to media and marae

TH PATH would be displayed in schools, marae and public places throughout Te Puaha o Waikato

Page 21: Te huarahi path power point

Building Authentic Relationships

All TH schools would be making regular kanohi ki te kanohi contact with every Māori whānau on their roll.

All TH school staff would be encouraged to participate in Te Tiriti workshops.

All TH school staff would be encouraged to participate in the Mauri Ora Tikanga Māori programme.

Page 22: Te huarahi path power point

Raising Māori Achievement

100% Māori children would be achieving age appropriate benchmarks and/or personal potential.

Other measurable data for Māori students would be comparable to non-Māori eg. attendance, retention, discipline.

Page 23: Te huarahi path power point
Page 24: Te huarahi path power point

Values

Manaakitanga – care and support for each other, Respect, Ako (reciprocal learning), Honesty, Whanaungatanga (links and relationships), Community, Equity, Hope, High expectations, Integrity, Aroha, Excellence, Trust, Perseverance, Resilience, Te Ao Māori, Wairuatanga (spiritual wellbeing)

Page 25: Te huarahi path power point
Page 26: Te huarahi path power point

Early Childhood Education

Now

We are unsure how many 5 year old children are accessing ECE

Enrol

Ourselves

Our whānau

ECE centres

MoE

Health Orgs

Tilly Potini

Huakina

Media

Stronger

ECE

Tamariki

ECE roadshow

Transitional relationships

Government policies, initiatives

Successful models

Blocks

$$$

Lack of man power and awareness of ECE facilities

Whānau – block or have blocks e.g.

transport, food, money, discomfort

1st Step

Prepare a survey that will assist schools to establish a benchmark

Contact external agencies re data and initiatives

¼ Mar 2012

25% of 5 year old Māori children will have accessed some form of regular Early Childhood Education.

½ Jan 2013

50% of 5 year old Māori children will have accessed some form of regular Early Childhood Education.

Page 27: Te huarahi path power point

Early Childhood Education

By the year 2015, every 5 year old Māori child in our area would have accessed some form of regular early childhood education.

Page 28: Te huarahi path power point

Whānau Education

Now

Several schools offer educational opportunities to whānau.

Some have gathered the educational requests of their whānau. We are aware of the need.

Enrol

Ourselves

Our whānau

Education providers

Health Orgs

Social Orgs Huakina

Media

Stronger

Keep our eyes on the ball

Community awareness

Poukai,

koroneihana,kingitanga events

Good communication

Regular evaluation

Blocks

$$$ Resources

Venues

Man power

Energy/Time

Awareness

Negativity

Frustration

Other commitments

Separation

1st Step

Schools will make face to face contact with whānau to identify the educational opportunities they would like by Oct 2010

¼ Mar 2012

TH is offering 2 educational opportunities every year.

½ Jan 2013

TH is offering 4 educational opportunities every year.

Page 29: Te huarahi path power point

Whānau Education

By the year 2015, TH would be offering 8 educational opportunities to the whānau in our area each year.

Page 30: Te huarahi path power point

Celebrating Success

Now

A cultural festival – 5 schools

TH – no media promotion

Various individual school c’s

Various community c’s

Enrol

Ourselves

Our whānau

Our schools

Huakina

Marae

Tutors

Media - Maori TV, Free lance writer

Stronger

Kapahaka tutors

Kapahaka wananga – costumes

Finance

SponsorshipMedia

Blocks

$$$ Resources

Tutors

Inability to work together

Lack of knowledge

Lack of access to key people

1st Step

Attend a variety of cultural celebrations

Ron Gordon invite Nikki Turner to view path.

Look into reproduction/sponsorship of PATH.

¼ Mar 2012

25% TH schools participating in CC

TH contributing 2 stories of success per year

The PATH displayed

½ Jan 2013

50% TH schools participating in CC

TH contributing 4 stories of success per year

The PATH regularly up-dated

Page 31: Te huarahi path power point

Celebrating Success

All TH schools would be participating in a celebration of culture in our area.

TH would contribute 8 stories of success per year to media and marae

TH PATH would be displayed in schools, marae and public places throughout Te Puaha o Waikato

Page 32: Te huarahi path power point

Building Authentic Relationships

Now

Inviting whānau to hui to share ideas

Understand the importance and need for Te Tiriti workshops

3 schools enrolled in MO

Enrol

Ourselves

Our whānau

Our schools

Marae

Te Tiriti Workshop Providers

Huakina

TWoA

Stronger

We need to do it together – schools and families

Build strong relationships and support networks – schools and whanau, between schools themselves

Blocks

-’ve Attitudes both parties

Continuing to do what we currently do

Not engaging kanohi ki te kanohi with our whānau

Time

Workload

Fear

1st Step

TH schools to up-date whānau data base (Feb2011)

Identify F2F contact status

Identify supportive whānau

TH schools plan to deliver TT & MO programs

¼ Mar 2012

TH schools maintaining F2F relationships with whānau.

Continue to offer TT workshops to staff.

25% TH schools completed MO

½ Jan 2013

TH schools maintaining F2F relationships with whānau.

Continue to offer TT workshops to staff.

50% TH schools completed MO

Page 33: Te huarahi path power point

Building Authentic Relationships

All TH schools would be making kanohi ki te kanohi contact with every Māori family on their roll.

All TH school staff would be encouraged to participate in Te Tiriti workshops.

All TH school staff would be encouraged to participate in the Mauri Ora Tikanga Māori programme.

Page 34: Te huarahi path power point

Raising Māori Achievement

Now

Some of our Māori tamariki are achieving really well.

Too many are not and are over represented in negative statistics.

We want to change this!!!

Enrol

Ourselves

Our whānau

Our schools

Our students

Community

Marae

Support Agencies e.g. youth aid, family support etc.

Stronger

Role models, mentors – past students, celebrities, whānau

NYLD

Praise

Believing in the students

Blocks

Teachers, students, whanau attitude and approach

Transience

Life demands

Resources

Transport

Negative publicity or exposure

Learning and behavioural difficulties

1st Step

TH schools to establish base line data end of 2010.

Share this data with students and whānau T1 2011.

Identified strategies to advance baseline data by T2 2011.

¼ Mar 2012

55% of Māori tamariki are achieving age appropriate benchmarks and/or personal potential

We have improved other measurable data by 25%.

½ Jan 2013

70% of Māori tamariki are achieving age appropriate benchmarks and/or personal potential

We have improved other measurable data by 50%.

Page 35: Te huarahi path power point

Raising Māori Achievement

100% Māori children would be achieving age appropriate benchmarks and/or personal potential.

Other measurable data for Māori students would be comparable to non-Māori eg. attendance, retention, discipline.

Page 36: Te huarahi path power point
Page 37: Te huarahi path power point

Emotions

• Inspired• Committed• Full of hope• Excited• Proud • Supported• Passionate• Thankful• Empowered• Awesome!

• Sense of purpose• Tired• Aroha for our roopu• This is what a community

is all about• Sense of togetherness• A stairway to heaven• New beginnings• Dreams come true• Weehoo!

Page 38: Te huarahi path power point