Māori alphabet
A short YouTube video on the Māori alphabet.
Mātauranga is a unique body of knowledge produced through and by Te Ao Māori (the Maōri world). It incorporates Māori traditional and contemporary knowledges, language, practices and culture. It encompasses concepts of knowledge and knowing that Māori ancestors brought with them to Aotearoa/New Zealand, and more contemporary areas of study such as kaitiakitanga, the Māori performing arts, Māori identity and Māori language revitalisation. According to Hikuroa (2017, p.5-6), mātauranga Māori is “a method for generating knowledge, and all of the knowledge generated according to that method” and “includes knowledge generated using techniques consistent with the scientific method, but explained according to a Māori world view”.
Mātauranga Māori is a taonga, and as such requires protection. While iwi Māori are the primary kaitiaki of their knowledge, the university has an obligation to protect mātauranga Māori, and to provide a safe environment in which mātauranga can flourish. WAI 262 Waitangi Tribunal Report provides detail on the Crown’s kaitiakitanga obligations with regard to mātauranga.
Mātauranga Māori is held, developed, and taught by iwi Māori experts (or those considered experts by Māori). It is undergoing revival in te ao Māori, on marae and at wānanga. It is not homogenous and can be iwi, hapū and whānau specific. It finds expression in all fields of human endeavour including engineering, economics, music, sports, art, biology, education, law, medicine, physics, psychology, religion, architecture, philosophy, mathematics, technology, as well as daily life in whānau and in communities.
Mātauranga Māori includes te reo Māori. It can be expressed in te reo Māori or other languages. It can use methods similar to those of science, though it recognises dimensions of existence beyond those accessible to science, and makes sense of a fundamentally relational universe (see Salmond, 2012).
Charles Royal (2012) states that mātauranga Māori:
The online version of Te Aka Māori-English, English-Māori Dictionary and Index. This online Māori dictionary is aimed at providing quick access.
An interactive story illustrating the voyage of Ngāpuhi ancestor, Nukutawhiti, to Aotearoa.
A list of te tiriti-related skills and knowledge that are expected for students that might be helpful for staff as well.
Discover the history of New Zealand’s landscape, its people, events, places, identity and cultures from sites like Te Ara, Te Papa, DigitalNZ and NZ History.
A critical guide to Māori and Pākehā histories of Aotearoa - A Curriculum Programme Resource (CPR) for Schools and Teachers.
Learning resources that help students explore concepts related to He Whakaputanga – the Declaration of Independence, Te Tiriti o Waitangi – the Treaty of Waitangi, and the Women’s Suffrage Petition from Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa, the National Library of New Zealand
Māori history encompasses the complete history of peoples in Aotearoa New Zealand, from the earliest Polynesian navigators, to those who interacted with English colonists, to the occupiers of land and the settlers of grievances, through to the movers, the shakers, and the everyday people of our communities today.