Our work with Māori educators and learners

E ngā mana, e ngā reo, e ngā mata ora o te mātauranga matua, nau mai, whakatau mai ki te paetukutuku Māori o Ako Aotearoa. Ko tōna tikanga, he whakawhitiwhiti whakaaro i waenganui i a tātau, he tuku kōrero e pā ana ki ngā mahi Māori a te tari nei, ā, he kete rauemi hoki hei āwhina i a tātau. Kia hoki tātau ki te whakataukī a ō tātau mātua tīpuna,

“Ko te manu kai i te miro, nōna te ngahere. Ko te manu kai i te mātauranga nōna te ao.”
Tihei mauriora! Whakarongo (listen to Ngahiwi's greeting)

Our Kaihautū Māori/Māori Development Manager is Ngahiwi Apanui.

Read Ngahiwi''s recent update on Te mahi ngātahi me te iwi Māori - Our work with and for Māori

This page provides information about how Ako Aotearoa provides strategic and sustainable support for Māori educators and learners.

These other sections of the website are also relevant -

The Resource Centre's Mātauranga Māori section for a comprehensive listing of practical resources, including work that Ako Aotearoa has produced or supported.   Also see our Research Register for a listing of research & projects relating to Mātauranga Māori

For further information contact Ngahiwi Apanui, Kaihautū Māori,  n.apanui@massey.ac.nz

This Good Practice report by Angus Macfarlane explains how 4 principles – whakanuia, hononga, pūmanawatanga, and mātauranga – have helped to sustain a learning environment that values diversity.

What's new in Our work with Māori educators and learners

Tuia Te Ako 2012

Event

Tuia Te Ako 2012

Tēnā koutou katoa. I can now confirm the Tuia Te Ako 2012 hui will be held at Pipitea Marae, Wellington, 29–30 March next year, so please put the date in your diary now.
Group news

It doesn't get any better

One of the first tasks I was handed when I started work at Ako Aotearoa in 2009 was to
Blog

He Takohanga Whakaaro

Blog