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Main Author: Taupo, Katrina
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1233401
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author Taupo, Katrina
author_facet Taupo, Katrina
Taupo, Katrina
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Creating Spaces for Whanau Wellbeing, Literacy and Numeracy in the Context of Neoliberalism in Aotearoa, New Zealand Taupo, Katrina Foreign Countries Well Being Numeracy Neoliberalism Adult Education Pacific Islanders Adult Students Self Esteem Adult Literacy Program Effectiveness Educational Policy This article reviews current research about three short focused literacy, language and numeracy programmes designed to assist New Zealand Maori (indigenous) adult students and their whanau. Whanau is a complex Maori concept that includes physical and metaphysical dimensions based on the Maori worldview of whakapapa (genealogy) and is at the heart of whanau adult literacy programmes. The programme's success was measured by the way students grew self confidence in their own literacy and numeracy abilities that translated into positive impacts for their whanau wellbeing. For example, students who did not have books in the home prior to participating in a programme now created spaces with books in the home for quiet reading as a result of attending an introduction to the public library. Through embedding appropriate literacy and numeracy techniques, Literacy Aotearoa tutors developed a reliable baseline to capture students' progress in their formative and summative stages of the programmes against a backdrop of neoliberal ideologies. Dominant neoliberal policies impact and outweigh educational policies through the demands for more transparency, efficiency and accountability as part of a quality improvement shift to market adult education in New Zealand. Despite this shift in policy, this article focused on ways to co-opt strategies that at a basic level may counter the disconnect between factors that drive the achievement gaps for vulnerable students learning to learn and the tensions that arise in order to comply with neoliberal policies that underpin New Zealand's changing adult education sector.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1233401
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2016
record_format eric
spellingShingle Creating Spaces for Whanau Wellbeing, Literacy and Numeracy in the Context of Neoliberalism in Aotearoa, New Zealand
Taupo, Katrina
Foreign Countries
Well Being
Numeracy
Neoliberalism
Adult Education
Pacific Islanders
Adult Students
Self Esteem
Adult Literacy
Program Effectiveness
Educational Policy
Creating Spaces for Whanau Wellbeing, Literacy and Numeracy in the Context of Neoliberalism in Aotearoa, New Zealand Taupo, Katrina Foreign Countries Well Being Numeracy Neoliberalism Adult Education Pacific Islanders Adult Students Self Esteem Adult Literacy Program Effectiveness Educational Policy This article reviews current research about three short focused literacy, language and numeracy programmes designed to assist New Zealand Maori (indigenous) adult students and their whanau. Whanau is a complex Maori concept that includes physical and metaphysical dimensions based on the Maori worldview of whakapapa (genealogy) and is at the heart of whanau adult literacy programmes. The programme's success was measured by the way students grew self confidence in their own literacy and numeracy abilities that translated into positive impacts for their whanau wellbeing. For example, students who did not have books in the home prior to participating in a programme now created spaces with books in the home for quiet reading as a result of attending an introduction to the public library. Through embedding appropriate literacy and numeracy techniques, Literacy Aotearoa tutors developed a reliable baseline to capture students' progress in their formative and summative stages of the programmes against a backdrop of neoliberal ideologies. Dominant neoliberal policies impact and outweigh educational policies through the demands for more transparency, efficiency and accountability as part of a quality improvement shift to market adult education in New Zealand. Despite this shift in policy, this article focused on ways to co-opt strategies that at a basic level may counter the disconnect between factors that drive the achievement gaps for vulnerable students learning to learn and the tensions that arise in order to comply with neoliberal policies that underpin New Zealand's changing adult education sector.
title Creating Spaces for Whanau Wellbeing, Literacy and Numeracy in the Context of Neoliberalism in Aotearoa, New Zealand
topic Foreign Countries
Well Being
Numeracy
Neoliberalism
Adult Education
Pacific Islanders
Adult Students
Self Esteem
Adult Literacy
Program Effectiveness
Educational Policy
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1233401