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Home › TLRI research › Research completed › School sector › Effective teaching in different cultural contexts: A comparative analysis of language, culture, and pedagogyEffective teaching in different cultural contexts: A comparative analysis of language, culture, and pedagogy
Project Description
The project proposal noted the key aim of the research project as being: to analyse a range of teaching practices for Māori and Pasifika students in Auckland city schools and conduct a comparative analysis of the teaching and learning of these students in classrooms that focus on Māori and Pasifika language and culture with classrooms where instructional practices focus on mainstreaming, and there is no, or limited input, of Māori and Pasifika language and cultural instruction. (Stoddart, Pihama, & Baba, 2003, p. 2) Furthermore, the research sought to extend the current understanding of effective generic teaching practices by identifying the context-specific and general principles of effective teaching practice for Years 7 and 8 Māori and Pasifika pupils.
TLRI research
Recently published reports
Pepe meamea in the spirit of the collective: Embedding Samoan indigenous philosophy in ECE for Samoan children under two
Jacoba MatapoOn2Science - Multiple affordances for learning through participation in online citizen science
Dr Cathal Doyle and Dr Cathy BunttingLearning From Each Other: Enhancing Pacific Education through People, Concept and Culture-focused Inquiry
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