000 02851nab a22002657a 4500
999 _c7922
_d7922
005 20250625151627.0
008 221124s2022 -nz|| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aAFVC
100 _aCairns, Tamati
_911461
245 _aPūao-te-Ata-tū and dissenting voices of change at New Zealand’s oldest school of social work
_cTamati Cairns and Leon Fulcher
260 _bAotearoa New Zealand Association of Social Workers,
_c2022
500 _aAotearoa New Zealand Social Work, 2022, 34(3): 34-47
520 _aINTRODUCTION: The Ministerial Advisory Committee Report on a Māori Perspective for the New Zealand Department of Social Welfare (1986) offers an historic reference point from which to examine education and training reforms initiated at Aotearoa New Zealand’s oldest school of social work and designed to better address the needs and aspirations of Māori and those working with Māori. Pūao-te-Ata-tū is an internationally unique example of social research facilitated by distinguished Māori leaders and senior government officials using indigenous methods. The Vice Chancellor of Victoria University was approached in 1986 along with its new Professor of Social Work about becoming drivers of Pūao-te-Ata-tū Recommendation 10(c) to “assess the extent to which tertiary social work courses are meeting cultural needs for those public servants seconded as students to the courses”. The early passing of alumnus- Elder John Rangihau, shortly after Pūao-te-Ata-tū was published, left a legacy—acknowledged posthumously by the Council of Victoria University in 1989—when a senior Te Rangihau Scholar teaching and research position was established with Ngāi Tūhoe. A decade of reform in social work education and research at Victoria University saw important movement towards supporting and promoting Māori perspectives in the delivery of community social services in three New Zealand regions. IMPLICATIONS: Five lessons learned about partnerships from the Victoria University experience are highlighted as issues that promote cultural responsiveness in support of Māori whānau, tamariki and rangatahi. The Wellington programme closed at the start of the new millennium without addressing the VUW Council relationship with Ngāi Tūhoe, highlighting broken promises. (Authors' abstract). Record #7922
650 _aMĀORI
_9357
650 _aRANGAHAU MĀORI
_95532
650 4 _9561
_aSOCIAL WORK EDUCATION
650 _aTERTIARY EDUCATION
_93921
650 0 _aTIKANGA TUKU IHO
_95542
651 4 _aNEW ZEALAND
_92588
700 _aFulcher, Leon
_911463
773 0 _tAotearoa New Zealand Social Work, 2022, 34(3): 34-47
830 _aAotearoa New Zealand Social Work
_96152
856 _uhttps://anzswjournal.nz/anzsw/article/view/931
_zRead article
942 _2ddc
_cARTICLE
_hnews116