Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Moeata Keil , Hilary Dansey Dutton , I.-Futa-Helu Ofamo'Oni , D.T. Mayeda , David Davies
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand., The University of Auckland
ANO 2008
TIPO Book
CITAÇÕES 7
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 29b72548aba804f26a86ad0f81c99b0e
MD5 f364a4171aff7e0426ab5ed63288ef90

Resumo

A substantial body of literature has examined the challenges that indigenous students face in higher education. Across Aotearoa New Zealand, the indigenous Māori population is under-represented at the university level, as are ethnically diverse Pacific students who trace their ancestries to neighbouring Pacific nations. This study relies on focus group interviews with high-achieving Māori and Pacific students (N = 90) from a large New Zealand university. Using kaupapa Māori (theory and methodology grounded in a Māori world view) and Pacific research principles, the study identifies the social factors contributing to indigenous students' educational success. Three broad themes emerged from discussions: family and university role modelling and support; indigenous teaching and learning practices; and resilient abilities to cope with everyday colonialism and racism. A positive indigenous ethnic identity ties these themes together, ultimately serving as the steady factor driving Māori and Pacific students' achievement motivation.

Ferramentas