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Home › TLRI research › Research completed › School sector › Pasifika teachers in secondary education: Issues, possibilities and strategiesPasifika teachers in secondary education: Issues, possibilities and strategies
Project Description
The study outlined the characteristics that Pasifika people assign to themselves and how these are challenged within educational contexts and at interfaces with other New Zealand cultures. It examined how schools assist and resist the accommodation of new Pasifika teachers. It surveyed the rationales for building Pasifika representation within the teaching force and how they shape the expectations and experience of new Pasifika teachers. Through examining how notions of Pasifika cultural identity for individuals are held in place between community ties, genealogical roots, and oral histories, the study asked how such identities might be seen as reaching out to possible futures within the context of mainstream secondary education within New Zealand. In the light of the analysis, the study examined how future priorities might be formulated and offers preliminary advice on how and where future initiatives might be targeted to bring more Pasifika teachers into the profession and to improve the retention of these teachers.