Matua and whaea victory: All teachers can choose te reo classroom titles, Ministry of Education declares
26 Apr, 2021 10:50 PM
3 minutes to read
Rangi Mitchell and Arihi Hutana said they are pleased Clive School are now letting teachers be referred to as matua and whaea. Photo / Warren Buckland
Rangi Mitchell and Arihi Hutana said they are pleased Clive School are now letting teachers be referred to as matua and whaea. Photo / Warren Buckland
New Zealand teachers who want to use the titles matua and whaea in the classroom instead of Mr and Miss have been given the green light to do so by the Ministry of Education.
Matua and Whaea: Clive School allows teachers to be referred to by te reo teaching titles after review
19 Apr, 2021 03:09 AM
3 minutes to read
Teachers can now be referred to as matua and whaea at Clive School. Photo / File
Hawkes Bay Today
The matua and whaea debate appears to have been settled. A Hawke s Bay school where two student teachers left after alleging they were not allowed to be referred to by pupils as matua and whaea says all teachers at the school will now be welcome to choose to use them as teaching titles.
A Clive School Board of Trustees spokeswoman confirmed today that the school had made made the changes after a review started by the incident.
Rawiri Waititi is on the war path . over treatment of Maori students
Rawiri Waititi is on the war path . over treatment of Maori students 15 April 2021
Two student teachers say Clive School wouldn t the to be referred to as whaea and matua , translated as Aunty and Uncle.
The Maori Party co-leader says the terms are about respect - whereas the Pakeha Sir and Miss are about hierarchy.
And he says some schools, which he wouldn t name, are cutting taonga off students necks - which express their cultural identity.
Rawiri Waititi is on the war path . over treatment of Maori students
Rawiri Waititi is on the war path . over treatment of Maori students 15 April 2021
Two student teachers say Clive School wouldn t the to be referred to as whaea and matua , translated as Aunty and Uncle.
The Maori Party co-leader says the terms are about respect - whereas the Pakeha Sir and Miss are about hierarchy.
And he says some schools, which he wouldn t name, are cutting taonga off students necks - which express their cultural identity.
Matua and whaea row: Ministry of Education has no formal guidelines on Māori titles in classroom nzherald.co.nz - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nzherald.co.nz Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.