Te Wānanga o Raukawa Prospectus 2018

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA

PROSPECTUS 2018 It’s time to enrol WWW.WANANGA.COM


MIHI Ko te wehi ki a Īhowa te tīmatanga o te whakaaro nui. E ai ki te kōrero, kotahi tonu te atua o te iwi Māori, ko Rangi-nui e tū iho nei, ko Papa-tū-ā-nuku e takoto ake nei, ā, ko tātou rā ō rāua uri e whakapirara nei, e korikori nei i waenganui i a rāua. Kia tangihia ō tātou mate, te hunga kua riro i te wahangūtanga o Aituā, hei whare kōrero, hei whare wānanga mā Hine-nui-ite-pō e kuku nei, e rauhī nei i te tangata. Okioki mai koutou ki te ao wairua. Waiho mātou ki muri nei e takuate atu nei, e whakapau rau mahara nei. Mā mātou e hamuhamu, huri i te ao, huri i te pō, ngā taonga i a koutou, ēnā e tika ana mā mātou e whāwhā, e manaaki. Moe mai koutou i roto i te Ariki. E te iwi whānui, tēnā koutou katoa. Ko te reo tēnei o Te Wānanga o Raukawa te tangi atu nei, te mihi atu nei ki a koutou. Ko Te Wānanga o Raukawa; he kaupapa mātauranga nā Te Kotahitanga o te Tonga, nā Te Āti Awa, Ngāti Raukawa me Ngāti Toa Rangatira i whakatū engari nā koutou, nā ngā iwi o te motu i manaaki, i whakarangatira. He wānanga i te mātauranga tōna kaupapa, he whakatupu i te mātauranga tōna whāinga. Mā ō tātou tikanga, mā ō tātou kaupapa e whakapūmau. Hei aha? Hei āwhina kia tupu ai, kia pua ai, kia tōnui ai ō tātou whānau, ō tātou hapū, ō tātou iwi ki tēnei ao.

Cover Photo: Joshua Paranihi, Ngāti Raukawa, Ngāti Tūwharetoa Toi Whakarākai (Whakairo)

Heoi e rau rangatira mā, kei konei e rārangi mai ana ētehi kōrero mō Te Wānanga o Raukawa hei tirohanga, hei whakaarotanga, hei akoranga pea mā koutou. Ko te taumata kōrero, ko te tangata i āta whakangaua ki te kōhatu karā o te whare wānanga o ngā tūpuna he kete kī, he purapura i ruiruia mai i roto o Rangiātea. Tēnā, whakapiripiri mai, whakatatatata mai. Kāti i konei. Kia tau ngā manaakitanga ki runga i a tātou katoa.


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

CONTENTS Welcome 2 Kaupapa and their expression

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Te Wānanga o Raukawa

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Destination Ōtaki

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Te Ara Whakamua

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Student Support

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Ōtaki Campus

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Theory and Understanding of Wānanga

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Tohu Offered

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Our Courses

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Whare Oranga

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Whare Toi

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Whare Whakaakoranga

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Whare Kōkiri

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Te Reo Māori

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Scholarships 62 How To Get Enrolled

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TE WÄ€NANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

KO TE REO MAIOHA TENEI, HAERE MAI KI

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TE WANANGA O RAUKAWA


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Te Wānanga o Raukawa welcomes you to engage with us in undertaking your education journey.

We are a provider that focuses on the needs and aspirations of our people, pitched on provision at undergraduate and postgraduate level with a strong emphasis and priority in te reo Māori.

84%

OF OUR STUDENTS IDENTIFY THEMSELVES AS MĀORI

77%

OF OUR STUDENTS ARE FEMALE

While providing a model that ensures our students are competent in their understanding of themselves, their history, cultural practices, language and literature, Te Wānanga o Raukawa is also committed to educating and empowering students vocationally. Our graduates are able to offer dual competencies in a range of professions. This sets them apart and advantages them when presenting their profile for employment opportunities.

You will see that we have a good range of offerings for your consideration. At any given time new programmes are in development as we strive to respond to current needs and interests. We invite you to join us, to choose Te Wānanga o Raukawa as your tertiary provider. Nau mai rā!

Mereana Selby Tumuaki

Students are well supported at Te Wānanga o Raukawa. There is a network of assistance from both within the organisation and the wider community which includes staff, kaiāwhina, whānau, hapū and iwi, all of whom give of their time and expertise to facilitate and enhance the education pathway.

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

KAUPAPA AND THEIR EXPRESSION

WHAKAPAPA Whakapapa reinforces the connections between all of us, and to our tūpuna, atua and tūrangawaewae as we strive to better understand and contribute to the mātauranga continuum that binds us one to another across the generations.

Te Wānanga o Raukawa operates within the kaupapa/tikanga framework as proposed by Ngā Kaihautū and endorsed by Te Mana Whakahaere. We find that this has placed us in an environment with challenges and opportunities to learn about how the Māori mind (prior to being influenced by the language and culture of later settlers) conceptualised and responded to the world. The kaupapa provide a window to that world. The ongoing accumulation of experience represents a contribution to our mātauranga continuum that has served us well and will serve us into the future. The ten Kaupapa are as follows.

“Kia Māori ā tātou mokopuna” The inextricable link between our ten kaupapa and this statement manifests itself in such a way that the kaupapa provide a framework to guide whakahaere/administrative, whakaako/teaching and whakatupu mātauranga/creative activities. This is in contrast to a process that would render the kaupapa as simply additions or enhancements to our activities.

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WHAKAPAPA – Nā Chris Gerretzen

That our descendants be distinctively Māori


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Te Reo is a taonga that we have inherited from our tūpuna and is not only an invaluable body of knowledge, enlightenment and innovation but is intimately connected with mātauranga, carrying valuable clues about the way our tūpuna understood and experienced the world. The acquisition, maintenance and revival of te reo must be a priority.

Manaakitanga provides us with endless opportunities to engage with people, individually and collectively, in a way that enhances each other’s mana. We need to ensure that all of our activities are conducted in a way that is mana enhancing of all those involved and reflects values such as generosity, fairness, respect and consideration. A favourable view formed by others suggests the presence of manaakitanga.

Wairuatanga acknowledges the existence and importance of the spiritual dimension in our lives and in mātauranga. Wairuatanga recognises the interdependence and extensive web of relationships between present, past and future generations in the rediscovery, maintenance and expansion of the mātauranga continuum.

WAIRUATANGA – Nā Mari Ropata

WAIRUATANGA

MANAAKITANGA – Nā Te Tahi Takao

MANAAKITANGA

TE REO MĀORI – Nā Te Rangikapiki Fraser

TE REO MĀORI

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Ūkaipōtanga reinforces the marae as our principal home, as a place of comfort, nourishment and inspiration and a place of primary importance in reconnecting with mātauranga from our own whānau, hapū and iwi. We should ensure that we are fully engaged with our marae and endeavour to create a similar environment, atmosphere and set of values at our places of engagement.

Pūkengatanga dictates the pursuit of excellence in all our activities and stipulates that we should build on the fields of expertise for which we are presently known. We need to contribute to the expansion of mātauranga, with confidence, based on our own experiences and provide distinctive, innovative and high quality facilities, programmes and services.

Kotahitanga values the ethic of working together towards the achievement of a common goal and rejects the notion of competition as conducive to the expansion of mātauranga. We should celebrate our distinctiveness and uniqueness as an institution and as individuals, whānau, hapū and iwi but also revel in our shared experiences, understandings, philosophies and interests.

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KOTAHITANGA – Nā Elaine Bevan

KOTAHITANGA

PŪKENGATANGA – Nā Tākuta Ferris

PŪKENGATANGA

ŪKAIPŌTANGA – Nā Chris Gerretzen

ŪKAIPŌTANGA


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Rangatiratanga implores us to behave in a way that attracts favourable comment from others to the extent where we might be considered to have attributes commonly associated with a rangatira. We must nurture these characteristics and be authoritative in our work and exercise control and discipline to ensure the integrity of our pursuits.

Whanaungatanga is being part of a larger whole and knowing where one sits and fits. It includes the right to belong and participate but carries the responsibility to accord all others the same privilege. It is about interdependence and not independence and within this are defined roles for all participants.

Kaitiakitanga in full bloom will lead to people viewing us as an institution that cares, nurtures, protects and shelters its people and its place and continues to preserve and enrich those things that we have inherited, that were created and once tended by others. Our choices need to employ our resources wisely and ensure that they contribute to our viability and reputation.

KAITIAKITANGA – Nā Te Kura ā Iwi o Whakatupuranga Rua Mano

KAITIAKITANGA

WHANAUNGATANGA – Nā Pip Devonshire

WHANAUNGATANGA

RANGATIRATANGA – Nā Tākuta Ferris

RANGATIRATANGA

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

TE WANANGA

O RAUKAWA

We invite you to journey with us and to see and experience the world through Māori eyes. All courses (excluding poupou/certificate courses) include a specialisation, an iwi and hapū component and te reo Māori. The Wānanga is a unique centre of higher learning devoted to the world of Māori knowledge, (mātauranga Māori). The Wānanga is a reformulation of an ancient Polynesian institution known as the whare wānanga, which were tribal centres of higher learning. The method of teaching at Te Wānanga o Raukawa is based upon knowledge and wisdom passed on by our ancestors. Through our holistic approach to teaching and learning, you will experience a new and exciting journey into knowledge. Today, Te Wānanga o Raukawa continues to build on its reputation as the only tertiary institution that offers iwi and hapū studies in depth. The value to whānau, hapū and iwi is inestimable and therefore makes a major contribution to the documentation of the history of Aotearoa New Zealand.

An investment in technology in response to student demand and technological change sees us expanding our provision both nationally and internationally. We have increased and improved the use of e-learning and the wider use of technology, reducing programme workload in such a way that there is no negative impact or compromise of quality. In 2018 we move to a blended academic model catering for the needs of our students, of which, the majority are already in employment. This allows for more interaction between tutor and student through the online space, and shorter wānanga days on-site. We see this as a positive move ensuring the needs of our students remain at the forefront as we navigate through the 21st century. Call us on 0800 wananga or email tetomonga@twor-otaki.ac.nz for further information on any of our programmes.

Te Wānanga o Raukawa arose from a joint effort of Te Āti Awa, Ngāti Raukawa and Ngāti Toa Rangatira, known also as the ART Confederation.

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

85%

OF OUR STUDENTS STUDY PART TIME

40

AVERAGE AGE OF STUDENTS ENROLLED

Kia rangatira te tū a Te Wānanga o Raukawa, hei whare ako whakatupu hoki i te mātauranga

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

33%

AT THE 2013 CENSUS MORE THAN 33% OF THE ŌTAKI POPULATION WERE MĀORI.

DESTINATION

OTAKI 10

The main campus of Te Wānanga o Raukawa is located in central Ōtaki on the Kāpiti Coast. Ōtaki is a small coastal town of about 6000, just an hour north of Wellington and an hour south of Palmerston North.


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Ōtaki boasts four kōhanga reo, a kura kaupapa Māori - Te Kura Kaupapa Māori o Te Rito, a kura ā iwi - Te Kura ā Iwi o Whakatupuranga Rua Mano, and of course Te Wānanga o Raukawa. Sporting and outdoor activities abound with numerous sports clubs for netball, rugby, tennis, soccer, squash and of course home to the Whiti te Rā Rugby League Club. The Ōtaki Gorge and Forks are in close proximity giving people another outlet for swimming, kayaking, tramping and observing nature and is a well-known gateway to the Tararua Forest Park.

Whether the sun is out or the weather is wet and wild Ōtaki Beach is popular with locals and visitors alike. It’s great for collecting pipi, fishing, swimming, beachcombing, and the list goes on. It’s a fun place for the whānau.

ANNUALLY ŌTAKI HOSTS:

Ōtaki has been favoured with a variety of outlet stores and second-hand shops.

The Ōtaki Kite Festival, a fun filled family affair with entertainment, stalls and spectacular kites on show.

The weather is awesome in the summer months which is why it is known as sunny Ōtaki. Come to Ōtaki. It’s a good place to be.

The Māoriland Film Festival, an international indigenous film festival dedicated to celebrating indigenous voices and storytelling in film.

The Waitohu School Fireworks Extravaganza. Parts of the Kāpiti Arts Trail. Te Rā Whakapūmau o Te Wānanga o Raukawa, the graduation day for students. www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

E kore au e ngaro, he kākano i ruia mai i Rangiātea

TE ARA

WHAKAMUA Lornalee Edmonds Chapman, Graduate Heke Whare Tapere (second from left with whānau)

Graduate Destinations

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As well as enhancing their cultural survivability with a strong focus on te reo Māori and researching iwi and hapū connections, students of all ages and levels of tertiary study are able to secure a qualification that leads to meaningful employment. We have opportunities for those who wish to retrain, upskill or further their knowledge in a rapidly evolving workplace and increase their contribution to New Zealand’s social and economic wellbeing.


TE WÄ€NANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Toangina-Karepa Nikora-Davis, Graduate Poutuarongo Kawa Oranga

www.wananga.com

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STUDENT

SUPPORT TE HIRINGA

TE WHARE PUKAPUKA

Te Hiringa is a dedicated team of staff based within Te Whare Kōkiri tasked with the role of helping students at Te Wānanga o Raukawa succeed in their studies. Their main goal is to provide the necessary support for student academic success, including:

Te Whare Pukapuka offers a range of library services to support the academic aspirations of the Wānanga community comprising our students, staff and kaiāwhina. We hold a range of material including books, periodicals, theses, student assignments, digital audio material and access to the student scholarship database “givME”. We offer a distance service for all students to provide access to books and information and an interloan service if we do not hold the information required. Our trained librarians can help with research enquiries and provide support for accessing information.

–– ICT support including access to, and help with Office 365, formatting of assignments, assistance with purchasing laptops etc. –– Mentoring and study support including accelerated learning techniques, extra tutorials and advice for those in their first year of study. –– Pastoral care including emotional and spiritual support while you are studying. –– Study guidance and advice to ensure you’re on the right path to achieve your educational aspirations. –– All areas of study such as Iwi and Hapū, Te Reo or your chosen specialisation. Located on the Ōtaki campus in Miria te Kakara the team are able to set up locations at various external sites such as Gisborne, Kaikohe and Manukau, or are available to advise students via phone or email. The team are well-equipped to assist with any barriers that may be hindering your learning journey, all are experts in their area of specialty, holding several Master’s degrees, and with over 100 years of teaching experience between them. All students have access to this service through their Pūkenga (tutor) or additionally can make contact with the Kaikōkiri (administrator) who will put you in contact with the right person. To find out more contact 0800 WANANGA ext 849 or email tehiringa@twor-otaki.ac.nz.

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Currently housed within the Whitireia building at the Ōtaki campus, Te Whare Pukapuka offers a warm and welcoming space for students with spacious study areas, access to desktop computers, WIFI along with printing, photocopying and scanning services. Opening hours are 9am to 11pm during noho and 9am to 5pm Monday to Friday. The full range of library services including the library catalogue can be found on the public website and are also detailed through the Library brochure available in hard copy or digital format.

HEALTH SERVICES If you become unwell while on noho in Ōtaki, the programme administrator, on approval from the Kaihautū, can arrange for you to be seen at the Ōtaki Medical Centre. If you are issued with a prescription, you will need to present your student ID card at Hamish Barham Pharmacy so that the prescription will be issued free of charge to you. Prescriptions from your own doctor will not be paid by Te Wānanga o Raukawa.


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

CHILDCARE FACILITY

NGĀ PURAPURA

He Iti Nā Mōtai is a whare kōhungahunga (early childhood care) and education centre at Te Wānanga o Raukawa in Ōtaki. He Iti Nā Mōtai provides a stimulating kaupapa Māori learning environment for the tamariki of students while you are on noho. We encourage you to make use of this facility. If you are seeking childcare while on noho in Ōtaki please contact us at least seven days prior to your arrival to ensure a place is available and your child can be accommodated.

Focus is duly placed on the health and wellbeing of our community. Ngā Purapura is a world-class training facility located at our Ōtaki campus. With a fully equipped gym, court facilities, meeting rooms, class rooms, cafe and more. The facility is especially designed to empower you to fulfil your own goals and aspirations in relation to Te Whare Tapa Whā:

A childcare subsidy is available for whānau who are eligible and our staff are able to assist with applications. For an updated list of fees please refer to information on our webpage www.wananga.com/he-iti-ng-motai, phone 06 364 8585 or email HeitinaaMootai@twor-otaki.ac.nz.

–– Te Taha Hinengaro (Intellectual Wellbeing)

RATONGA ĀKONGA Our student services team will process your enrolment and assist you with your application for a Student Loan and Allowance. We can also act as an advocate on your behalf when dealing with Studylink and can help you complete the required information for your childcare subsidy forms for Work and Income; or any forms for scholarships that require official sign-off by Te Wānanga o Raukawa.

HOKOMAI MERCHANDISE SHOP Our students can purchase Te Wānanga o Raukawa branded clothing and other merchandise from the Hokomai shop, located on the Ōtaki campus. Shop hours are 1pm – 2pm on selected days when students are on campus.

–– Te Taha Tinana (Physical Wellbeing) –– Te Taha Wairua (Sensory Awareness and Spiritual Wellbeing) –– Te Taha Whānau (Social Wellbeing) While you are attending residential noho, you will have FREE access to Ngā Purapura. Appropriate training clothing and towel are required and subsidies apply for all students and staff of Te Wānanga o Raukawa.

TE ŌHĀKĪ ‘He kōrero, he tohutohu whakamutunga nā te tangata i mua i tōna matenga’ Te Ōhākī represents the embodiment of the dying wish of Ngāpera WiKohika, a former staff member of Te Wānanga o Raukawa. Her request was that we should all learn from her experience in suffering from smoking related illnesses that contributed directly to her loss of life. Te Wānanga o Raukawa is a ‘Smoke Free Campus’ and we aim to support those of our students who smoke with the tools and knowledge to be able to work towards a lifestyle that is totally free from smoking. Ultimately, our broader goal is that all Te Wānanga o Raukawa students and graduates will be in a strong position to positively influence whānau in making informed decisions around wellbeing and good health.

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

OTAKI CAMPUS

STUDENT LIFE

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Residential seminars or noho, range from 3-6 days at a time. We provide a range of accommodation options at the Ōtaki campus. There are dormitory facilities in an open sleeping area, a marae style arrangement with mattresses for larger groups, and a small number of units available to those less able. We supply sheets, pillows and pillowcases. Students bring blankets/sleeping bags plus any personal and/or medical care items. There is a small shopping area five minutes walk from the Wānanga should you require any personal items while on noho. This includes a Countdown supermarket, chemist, public library, Kiwibank/Post Shop, ANZ bank and a number of cafe’s. Ōtaki beach is approximately 20 minutes walk from the Wānanga if you want to stroll down to the beach in your break. The sandy beach, beautiful river and wide open spaces framed by the majestic Tararua ranges make Ōtaki a great place to unwind.


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

A wireless network service is available in all academic areas across the Ōtaki campus.

Ōtaki beach is approximately 20 minutes walk from the Wānanga

In January 2016, a natural sugars only policy was introduced on campus. Creating a healthier learning environment for students and to support the health and wellbeing of our staff.

A five minute walk from the Wānanga to a small shopping area

Mid 2018 will see the opening of our newest whare ‘Te Ara a Tāwhaki’ purposely built to support students and their learning journey. The building will house a state-of-theart lecture theatre, library, conference facility, one-stop shop for student information and an area to either study, chill or hang out with fellow students.

A wireless network service on campus A range of accommodation options at the Ōtaki campus 24h

24 hour security Pick-up/drop-off service from Ōtaki campus to local bus stops

www.wananga.com

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THEORY AND UNDERSTANDING OF WANANGA 18


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Marae Based Studies

672

OF OUR TOTAL EFTS COME FROM MARAE BASED STUDIES

At the heart of the philosophy of teaching marae based studies (MBS) is a model where students and teachers alike are taught of home, at home, by home and for home. The provision of formal education on marae continues to fulfil a model for the economic health and wealth of Māori. Graduates of our programmes are able to contribute directly and immediately to capacity building for hapū and iwi by completing valuable and relevant research whilst studying with Te Wānanga o Raukawa. The survival of Māori as a people will be assured when there is a growing number of Māori living according to kaupapa tuku iho. These are inherited values, which are expressed by living te reo Māori and tikanga tuku iho, and are always present when there is activity on our marae. The recent introduction of blending learning across all of our academic programmes allows students to undertake some of their studies in the comfort of their homes, or marae. Marae based studies are currently located in Northland, the East Coast, and a number of other sites around Aotearoa, New Zealand. A new site, Te Wānanga o Raukawa ki Manukau in Auckland is being established for delivery of courses in 2018. Courses available at these sites are dependent on demand but range from Poupou to Tāhuhu - Certificate to Masters. Contact us to find out more about a marae based site near you. 0800 WANANGA tetomonga@twor-otaki.ac.nz

One set of procedures that applies is described as the kawa of learning, te kawa o te ako.

The marae is our principal home; maintain and respect

It relates to protecting and maximising the learning and teaching potential of students and staff at Te Wānanga o Raukawa. It aims to curb activity that reduces the capacity to learn and teach. One dimension of te kawa o te ako affirms that anyone who feels unable to forgo the use of drugs or alcohol during noho should not attend. Infringements of the kawa will place the person, and possibly their whānau, hapū and iwi, at risk and possible withdrawal from study at Te Wānanga o Raukawa.

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

TOHUED OFFER

Te Wānanga o Raukawa provides Māori tertiary education founded on tikanga and kaupapa tuku iho, since 1981.

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All programmes are NZQA approved Learn in a distinctively Māori environment Residential noho in Ōtaki include meals, accommodation with access to wifi, an on-campus gym, merchandise shop and library


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

POUTUARONGO

HEKE

TĀHUHU

POUTĀHŪ

POUPOU

TĀHUHU Master Degree The tāhuhu is the master degree, the achievement of an advanced level of research and study at postgraduate level. A master’s degree is two years full time study and may also be studied part time.

POUTĀHŪ Postgraduate Diploma Poutāhū is the postgraduate diploma, usually one year of full time study or longer part time.

POUTUARONGO Bachelors Degree Poutuarongo is the term for an undergraduate bachelor degree. The duration is usually three or four years of full time study and can also be taken part time.

HEKE Diploma Heke are diploma level courses. Most of the heke at Te Wānanga o Raukawa comprise of the first year of a degree programme.

POUPOU Certificate Poupou are certificate level qualifications. They are usually short courses or introductory programmes.

www.wananga.com

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TE WÄ€NANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

OUR

COURSES Your guide to study

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

NGĀ WHAKAMĀRAMA HOW IT WORKS Our academic year begins in March and ends in November. Teaching and learning is supported by an online and virtual learning environment called Mūrau (Moodle), which can be accessed by registered users anywhere in the world. All full year study programme includes:

50%

Specialist area of study

25%

Iwi and Hapū studies

25%

Te Reo Māori studies

BLENDED LEARNING Online, residential noho and self-directed learning (SDL) SPECIALISATION

IWI & HAPŪ, TE REO STUDIES 50 hours Online/SDL reo lessons Online 2 hours per week 1 x Hui Rumaki Reo

Week 13-16 Kura Tautoko (Support & Completion School)

Huringa 1

Week 1-6 1 x 15CR paper 300 hours Blended incl 3 day noho

Week 13-16 Kura Tautoko (Support & Completion School)

Huringa 1 Iwi & Hapū Week 1 - 12 1 x 15CR paper

Week 7-12 1 x 15CR paper 300 hours Blended incl 3 day noho

50 hours Online/SDL reo lessons Online 2 hours per week 1 x Hui Rumaki Reo

Week 13-16 Kura Tautoko (Support & Completion School)

Huringa 2

Week 1-6 1 x 15CR paper 300 hours Blended incl 3 day noho

Week 13-16 Kura Tautoko (Support & Completion School)

Huringa 2 Iwi & Hapū Week 1 - 12 1 x 15CR paper

Week 7-12 1 x 15CR paper 300 hours Blended incl 3 day noho

TOTAL OF 60 CREDITS

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TOTAL OF 60 CREDITS


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Iwi and Hapū

For 2018 all undergraduate Iwi & Hapū courses will be facilitated online removing the need to attend a face-toface delivery. Learning is done through 'Mūrau' and is suited to all learning styles with tutor assistance every step of the way.

Hokia ki ō maunga kia purea koe e ngā hau a Tāwhirimātea. Return to your mountains To be cleansed by the winds of Tāwhirimātea

Future pathways for graduates of Iwi and Hapū studies include iwi and hapū leadership roles, governance roles, lead negotiator, historian, researcher, policy analyst, advisors, iwi liaison officers and more. Graduates steeped in iwi and hapū knowledge are highly valued in the modern workforce and Aotearoa society.

Hokia ki ō maunga reminds us of our inherited responsibilities to people and places of significance. This includes our iwi, hapū, whānau and tribal homes. Establishing and maintaining relationships and connections with those who share common whakapapa allows us access to a larger collective. This whakataukī encourages us to return to our tūrangawaewae to be restored and refreshed within tikanga Māori. Its basic philosophy is to 'know about oneself'. Visiting and connecting to our marae and people is one way Māori do this. Iwi and Hapū studies aims to increase the number of people participating in whānau, hapū and iwi affairs and is a core subject area studied by undergraduate and postgraduate students. The study encourages knowledge and confidence in who students are as Māori.

New Programmes Our aim is to develop programmes that meet the needs of our people. We continually look at how we can improve our existing portfolio and increase the knowledge base of iwi throughout Aotearoa. The following programme has been developed in collaboration with industry experts and will be offered in 2018, pending external approval. Please contact Whare Whakaakoranga on 0800 926 2642 xtn 782 for more details: –– Poutāhū Akorau - A one year Graduate Diploma in Teaching, delivered in te reo Māori, for anyone who has an existing degree in any field. www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

WHARE ORANGA COURSES

Toiora Whānau (Social Work) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Kaitiakitanga Pūtaiao (Environmental Management) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Rongoā (Māori Holistic Wellbeing) Heke (Diploma)

Kawa Oranga (Health Promotion, Sport and Exercise Sciences) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Pakari Tinana (Physical Wellbeing) Poupou (Certificate)

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TE WÄ€NANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

WHARE ORANGA

WHARE ORANGA

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Toiora Whānau (Social Work) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor) One year diploma (NZQA Level 5), Four year bachelor’s degree (NZQA Level 7) Residential seminars, self directed and online learning March start date Fees apply Toiora Whānau provides a uniquely Māori perspective on whānau wellness. You will gain the skills and knowledge required to work effectively with Māori to improve the social wellbeing of whānau, hapū and iwi. Poutuarongo Toiora Whānau is a four year degree accredited by the Social Workers Registration Board. The Heke Toiora Whānau is a one year introduction to the principles of whānau wellbeing and working in a Māori context.

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Mātauranga Māori and whakawhanaungatanga provide the foundations for the promotion of wellbeing, iwi and hapū planning, and hui organisation. You will also develop kaupapa Māori research skills and a working knowledge of social policy, legislation, Māori policy development and practices relevant to whānau wellbeing. Iwi and hapū studies and te reo Māori are an integral part of all Toiora Whānau programmes.

CAREER PATHWAYS Heke: Whānau, Hapū and Iwi Health Promoter, Healthcare Assistant. Poutuarongo: Registered Social Worker in government or non-government health and social service organisations, Rangatahi Health and Education Specialist, Māori Health and Wellbeing Consultant, Policy Analyst.


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Kaitiakitanga Pūtaiao (Environmental Management)

Rongoā (Māori Holistic Wellbeing)

Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

One year diploma (NZQA Level 5)

One year diploma (NZQA Level 5), Three year bachelor’s degree (NZQA Level 7)

Residential seminars, self directed and online learning

Residential seminars, self-directed learning and online learning Course dates vary depending on location Fees apply Kaitiakitanga Pūtaiao studies explore the roles and responsibilities of tangata whenua to ngā taonga tuku iho (our inherited treasures). It looks at how to uplift and maintain the wellbeing of our environment from a kaupapa Māori perspective. Key themes covered in the degree are Natural Resource Management, Environmental Sciences, Environmental Law and Strategic Planning. Engage with like-minded environmentalists and gain an understanding of a kaupapa Māori approach to the environment. Examine biodiversity on Kāpiti Island and monitor a freshwater body for your hapū. Learn to identify native birds and their calls, indigenous plants and their traditional uses. Environmental planning, eel fisheries, wetlands and other natural habitats feature strongly, as does building an awareness of alternative methods for sustainable and eco-efficient building construction. At a diploma level you are introduced to the foundations of environmental management, iwi and hapū studies and te reo Māori. As a graduate of the degree programme you will be equipped with tools to support hapū self-determination and development aspirations for te taiao (our environment) within tikanga management frameworks.

Heke (Diploma)

Fees apply. For more information visit www.wananga.com or call 0800 WANANGA. Learn the values, principles and practises of Māori Health and Wellbeing, known as Rongoā, and develop a holistic approach to the promotion of wellbeing. Heke Rongoā provides students interested in rongoā with a mātauranga Māori foundation for understanding the origins of rongoā, rongoā specific research techniques, the application of rongoā, Māori models of health and wellbeing, and the impact of legislation on rongoā as well as providing opportunities for students to utilise te reo Māori and be part of the revitalisation movement. Heke Rongoā aims to develop people who will contribute to the reclamation, preservation, revitalisation and expansion of iwi and hapū health and wellbeing practises as well as researching and understanding the value of their own iwi specific kōrero. The Heke Rongoā programme aims to contribute to the growing pool of bilingual and bicultural practitioners in traditional and contemporary Māori healing for whānau, hapū and iwi, Māori and non-Māori organisations.

CAREER PATHWAYS Heke: Rongoā Practitioner, Rongoā Advisor, Whānau, Hapū and Iwi Health Promoter. Natural Health Therapist.

CAREER PATHWAYS WHARE ORANGA

Bi-lingual Conservation Scientist and Forester, Bi-lingual Energy Auditor, Bi-lingual Environmental Engineer, Bi-lingual Environmental Protection Technician, Urban Regional Planner, Rūnanga, Iwi and Hapū Representative, Resource Management Act work, DoC Ranger, Project Management of Restoration Works, Biodiversity work in Councils.

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

My whānau is from Whakatōhea, Ōpōtiki but I grew up in Marton and spent the majority of my life in Palmerston North. After I’ve completed all my studies I’m taking my whānau back home to Ōpōtiki to be closer to my whenua. I’m a builder by trade but for years I wasn't happy in my mahi or the industry which I felt was heavily profit based; there was no reward for me in my job, I was looking for more.

Kris Corkran nō Whakatōhea Poutuarongo Kaitiakitanga Pūtaiao, Tau Tuatahi

I had been searching online for something that appealed to me, something that I felt good about doing and Kaitaiakitanga Pūtaiao resonated with me. I felt a strong connection spiritually to the land and through doing this study I’m gaining a better understanding of the reasons why I was feeling that way. It took me about two years to take the plunge as I wasn’t sure how I was going to manage taking the step from full time employment to study, being the main breadwinner, but I’m so pleased I did. The good thing about studying at Te Wānanga o Raukawa is that you can keep working while you’re studying. This tohu encapsulates everything that I value and I see it taking me back home to Ōpōtiki to apply what I’ve learnt on my own whenua. This study has strengthened my connections at home through iwi and hapū research. I think my kaumātua had enough of me asking all these questions, but they’re always pleased to have me back home. When I started I had very little reo but studying at the wānanga is also helping me develop this area too.

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I’m already sharing what I’m learning with my whānau, respect for our atua Māori and how what we do, and the decisions we make, affect our land; and to be accountable and take responsibility for our actions as kaitiaki. I’ve enjoyed the variety of people I’ve been exposed to who all come from different backgrounds and different ages. Our class is awesome. I love the trips, Kāpiti Island on our first noho. There’s been heaps of cool trips, it’s not just classroom based. Coming down to the Ōtaki campus feels like home now which makes it easier as I don’t like leaving my three tamariki. The hardest part was making the shift from full time mahi to study but I wish I had done this sooner. It was important for me to learn this type of mahi from a Māori perspective because that’s where I want to work (for my own) and no other place offers this, plus the kaupapa Maōri aspect of this tohu. This is what makes it so unique. I’d say if you want to work for a Māori organisation or your iwi, looking after our natural resources or environment then this tohu is for you. If it’s in your comfort zone to step out and do this tohu, just do it.


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Kawa Oranga (Health Promotion, Sport And Exercise Sciences) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor) One year diploma (NZQA Level 5), three year bachelor’s degree (NZQA Level 7) Residential seminars, self directed and online learning

Māori communities. Kawa Oranga is further supported by a number of kaiāwhina from across Aotearoa comprising of leading Māori academics and researchers together with recognised Māori wellbeing, sports and exercise specialists each of whom bring a distinctive range of skills, career experiences, specialist expertise and Māori cultural awareness to the classroom.

March start date

CAREER PATHWAYS

Fees apply

Graduates of Heke and Poutuarongo Kawa Oranga are well equipped to move into a broad range of related career pathways, including:

Kawa Oranga comprises both a one-year diploma-level qualification and a three-year bachelor-level qualification that introduces students to fundamental kaupapa (guiding principles), tikanga (practices) and kawa (protocols) pertaining to Māori Wellbeing, Sport and Exercise Promotion.

–– Māori Health and Wellbeing Promotion –– Whānau Ora Navigation –– Rangatahi Health and Education Specialist –– Kōhanga, Kura and Wharekura Teacher Training

Kawa Oranga is taught out of Ngā Purapura, a world-class high performance Centre for Māori Wellbeing, Sport and Exercise located in Ōtaki at Te Wānanga o Raukawa. The unique learning opportunities offered within this distinctive environment enables students to be fully immersed and involved within a contemporary model for whānau and community wellbeing and high performance.

–– Primary and Secondary School Teacher Training

Kawa Oranga strives to empower students with the necessary knowledge, skills and practical experiences in order to make a meaningful and unique contribution in a leadership capacity to Māori wellbeing initiatives. It also represents an evolving philosophy for Māori wellbeing that is underpinned by ongoing research and exploration into Mātauranga Māori (Māori Knowledge) and Māori Wellbeing, Sport and Exercise Promotion.

–– Kaupapa-based Physical Activity and Nutrition.

–– Māori Wellbeing, Sports and Exercise Consultancy –– Whānau Wellbeing Advisory –– Post-graduate studies in Māori Wellbeing, Sport and Exercise Promotion –– Māori Health Research

WHARE ORANGA

A defining element of the Kawa Oranga journey is the strong emphasis upon the acquisition of Te Reo Māori in conjunction with an increased awareness of the interconnection between whānau, hapū and iwi dynamics. These components jointly ensure that graduates are sufficiently equipped with the necessary building blocks of Māori cultural identity that are critical for meaningful mana-enhancing engagement with

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Pakari Tinana (Physical Wellbeing) Poupou (Certificate) 16 week certificate (NZQA Level 4) Course dates vary depending on location March and July start dates Fees apply. For more information visit www.wananga.com or call 0800 WANANGA. The overall aim of Poupou Pakari Tinana is to introduce students to successful strategies for enhancing mauri ora (vitality). You will begin to explore some of the fundamental principles and philosophies of Māori wellbeing in a way that is applicable and relevant to both your individual and whānau wellness journeys. Poupou Pakari Tinana is designed in a way that reinforces the value of whanaungatanga (positive relationships) as a means of engaging participants successfully and purposefully in mauri enhancing activities that promote purposeful daily movement and optimal nutrition. An important outcome of this qualification is to develop a capacity to make informed choices regarding nutrition, exercise, recovery and lifestyle through the utilisation of a framework that reflects kaupapa, tikanga and kawa relevant to Māori wellbeing. Poupou Pakari Tinana comprises four (4) papers that each encompass specific elements of Māori Wellbeing including: –– Foundations of Māori Wellbeing; –– Strategies for promotion and facilitation of physical activity and optimal nutrition within whānau environments; –– Exploration of tūpuna-based (ancestral) wellness journeys;

FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES AND FEES VISIT WWW.WANANGA.COM *Minimum numbers apply

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–– Exploration of movement and kai as a means to enhancing mauri ora; –– The exploration of kaupapa, tikanga and kawa as a way of enhancing outcomes throughout the whānau wellness journey. Graduates of this programme may also be interested in: –– Kawa Oranga (Health Promotion, Sport and Exercise Science) –– Rōngoa (Māori Holistic Wellbeing) Talk to us about options for delivering this in cohorts* at a marae near you.

CAREER PATHWAYS Māori health promotion, Whānau Ora navigation, Iwi, Hapū and/or Māori organisational sports, exercise or nutrition consultation, Māori event management or Kōhanga, Kura or Wharekura hauora and pakari tinana roles.


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

I am one of the oldest tauira in my year group at Kawa Oranga but that hasn’t stopped me from giving everything a go and giving it my best. I have met lots of other older tauira who have come to the wānanga for many different reasons and studying different kaupapa.

I enrolled at Te Wānanga o Raukawa to gain the knowledge that I needed to teach my students some papers at NCEA Level 2 and 3. My studies started as a professional development pathway for me but I didn’t expect that, along the way, I would gain so much more for myself as well. My Kawa Oranga studies have been a journey of affirmation of my own beliefs as well as learning many more new skills and strategies to support, not only my students, but to take back home to my marae and my community.

The hui rumaki reo are so intense, so full on and so rewarding. To have the opportunity to converse in te reo Māori 24 hours, every day for a week is challenging and a great boost to your wairua. As I pass halfway in my third year I am getting excited about the prospect of graduating, and being able to make my learnings come alive back home assisting people to make changes in their lives through Māori health initiatives.

Christina Stockman Nō Ngāti Pāhauwera, Ngāti Kahungungu Poutuarongo Kawa Oranga

WHARE ORANGA

Ko Christina Stockman tāku ingoa and I teach at Te Kura Kaupapa Māori o Ngāti Kahungunu o Te Wairoa. I whakapapa to Ngāti Pāhauwera on my Dad’s side and live in a small place called Mōhaka in Hawkes Bay.

We are all united in our belief and our commitment to kaupapa Māori learning and teaching. The great thing is, it doesn’t matter if you come with little or no knowledge of te reo Māori, there will always be support from the pūkenga and your class mates to help to get you through.

I am one of the oldest tauira in my year group at Kawa Oranga but that hasn’t stopped me from giving everything a go and giving it my best.

www.wananga.com

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TE WÄ€NANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

WHARE

TOI

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

“I would recommend studying Toi Whakarākai to anyone who wishes to start their journey to their future.” Joshua Paranihi Nō Ngāti Raukawa, Ngāti Tūwharetoa Poutuarongo Toi Whakarākai (Whakairo)

WHARE TOI COURSES

Whare Tapere (Literary Performing Arts) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Toi Whakarākai (Design and Art) Whakairo (Carving) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Toi Whakarākai (Design and Art) Raranga (Weaving) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

www.wananga.com

WHARE TOI

FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES AND FEES VISIT WWW.WANANGA.COM

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

WHARE

TOI

Whare Tapere (Literary Performing Arts) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor) One year diploma (NZQA Level 5), Three year bachelor’s degree (NZQA Level 7) Residential seminars, self directed learning and online learning March start date Fees apply Whare Tapere studies introduces you to the expression of Māori concepts, behaviour and values through song and dance. Learn about the history of whare tapere and develop key performance skills, including haka and waiata. Mātauranga Māori and te reo Māori are a feature of all Whare Tapere progammes. Graduates of the poutuarongo (degree) programme will be exponents of composition and performance of kaupapa Māori, and will be valued repositories of te reo and mātauranga Māori. Students will be able to articulate the knowledge of the Whare Tapere, and be conversant with the origins of Māori performing arts that pertain to their own iwi and to various other iwi. They will possess the ability to apply analytical observation of tikanga within Māori performing arts, including stage management, choreography and decorative arts within performance. The programme has been revised to allow greater connection with learning about iwi and hapū studies and te reo Māori. These two areas have become the core components of the degree programme, synergised and jointly delivered. In the final year of the degree programme, students will participate in an overseas field research tour to the Pacific to further

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explore the origins of Whare Tapere. The assessments for most of the degree programme will be Whare Tapere performances and oral presentations in te reo; elevating these traditions as appropriate measures for the successful completion of the Whare Tapere degree. Further reo study through hui rumaki reo are also included in the programme. Students will study about their own iwi and hapū and demonstrate their understanding through Whare Tapere performances, including newly created compositions of haka and waiata in te reo. Nau mai haramai!

CAREER PATHWAYS Poutuarongo: Performing Arts Teacher, Performing Arts Cultural Advisor, Entertainer, Stage Manager, Tourism/ Hospitality Advisor, Performer, Kapa Haka Choreographer, Composer, Educator/Lecturer.


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

I have always been fascinated by Māori Art even since I was a child. I always found comfort in sitting in a marae and staring at our carvings inside the wharenui. When I was seven I moved to Australia and lost touch with my Māoritanga but always found a bit of my Māoritanga in my art. One day after watching my dad getting a tā moko and listening to the kōrero in the room, my spark was reignited and my journey begun.

Nō Ngāti Raukawa, Ngāti Tūwharetoa Poutuarongo Toi Whakarākai (Whakairo)

I would recommend studying toi whakarākai to anyone who wishes to start their journey to their future. My future in toi Māori, and my present studies at Te Wānanga o Raukawa is not possible without the knowledge of our past.

I learned the old pūrākau about our atua and why our people created and carved the way they did.

I learned the old pūrākau about our atua and why our people created and carved the way they did. I have carved pūtōrino, waka hoe, wheku, tekoteko, uhi (traditional tā moko tools) and taiaha. The patterns I adorn my carvings

WHARE TOI

Joshua Paranihi

My mother was my big push into following my dream. In 2015 I moved back to Aotearoa and enrolled in Poutuarongo Toi Whakarākai with Te Wānanga o Raukawa.

with fill me with pride and I thank my kaiako for filling me with the knowledge of our old people.

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

WHARE

TOI

Toi Whakarākai (Design and Art) Whakairo (Carving) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor) Three year bachelor’s degree (NZQA Level 7) Residential seminars, self directed AND online learning March start date Fees apply The aim of Toi Whakarākai is to increase the number of Māori artists and provide a pathway for those wanting to give voice, expression to thought via the visual medium of toi whakairo rākau (traditional Māori wood carving), and to increase the number of Māori artists who can contribute to the survival and well being of their whānau, hapū and iwi in a uniquely Māori way. The journey for the student begins with the ‘Heke Toi Whakarākai’ (Diploma in Māori Design and Art), an introduction into the production methods used in traditional Māori art forms associated with whakairo rākau alongside the study of iwi narratives, pūrākau and Māori creation stories. Whakapapa (genealogy) underpins our world view and this understanding provides the student with a parallel view to the past which accompanies their journey forward into the realms of Hine Raukatauri (deity of wind instruments). Students will explore construction aspects of: –– Wind instruments such as the pūtōrino and associated pūrākau and kōrero - Tūmātauenga (deity of weaponry etc). –– Wahaika, kotiate (hand weapons) and associated pūrākau and kōrero - Rongo-mā-Tāne (deity of peace, cultivation). –– Whare tūpuna, cultivation and associated pūrākau and kōrero - Mataora (deity of taa moko) and associated artwork, te tuhi (design elements) whakarākai (adornments, surface design) and pūrākau and kōrero. Students will continue to build upon these foundational skills in years two and three of the Poutuarongo Toi Whakarākai (Bachelor of Māori Design and Art) and increase their proficiency in whakairo rākau and further extend on iwi/hapū research and Māori language skills.

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The programme has been recently revised to allow greater connection between the three core components of Iwi and Hapū Studies, Te Reo Māori and Toi Whakarākai. The assessment mode for most of the degree will be whakairo rākau creations and oral presentations in te reo. The studies in the student’s iwi and hapū will drive the creative works and te reo will assist in conveying the symbolism and imagery of the creation. Graduates of the Poutuarongo Toi Whakarākai will be significant contributors to maintaining and extending iwi traditions and kōrero through Māori art creations.

CAREER PATHWAYS Working Artist, Exhibition Technician, Educator / Lecturer, Curator.


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES AND FEES VISIT WWW.WANANGA.COM

Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor) Three year bachelor’s degree (NZQA Level 7) Residential seminars, self directed AND online learning March start date Fees apply Toi Whakarākai aims to increase the number of Māori artists who are skilled in traditional weaving techniques and who can significantly contribute towards the wellbeing and development of their whānau, marae, hapū and iwi. Iwi and hapū studies and te reo Māori are an integral part of all Toi Whakarākai programmes.

Heke Toi Whakarākai introduces you to tikanga, processes and research associated with the creation of traditional Māori woven taonga. You will learn to gather and prepare natural materials to weave in the techniques of whatu, tāniko or raranga in order to create indigenous fashion, handmade textiles and other woven art forms. Years two and three of the Poutuarongo Toi Whakarākai increase your proficiency and mātauranga through the creation of more refined woven art forms. You will undertake in-depth research about your marae and hapū and further extend your Māori language skills.

CAREER PATHWAYS Whānau/Hapū/Iwi weaver, Commissioned weaver, Independent Artist, Exhibiting Artist, Educator and further studies relevant to Textile Conservation, Museum Studies, Fashion Design, Contemporary artist.

www.wananga.com

WHARE WHARE TOITOI

Toi Whakarākai (Design and Art) Raranga (Weaving)

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

WHARE

WHAKAAKORANGA WHARE WHAKAAKORANGA COURSES

Ahunga Tikanga (Māori Laws & Philosophy)* Heke (Diploma), Poutuarongo (Bachelor), Poutāhū (Postgraduate) and Tāhuhu (Master) THE PROGRAMMES BELOW ARE APPROVED BY THE EDUCATION COUNCIL OF AOTEAROA.

Whakaakoranga (Māori Medium Teaching) Heke (Diploma), Poutuarongo (Bachelor), Poutāhū (Postgraduate Diploma) and Tāhuhu (Master)

Te Rangakura Kaiwhakaako (Bilingual Teaching) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Whakaakoranga Kōhungahunga (Early Childhood Teaching) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

*Note: These courses will be run subject to numbers.

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WHARE WHAKAAKORANGA

TE WÄ€NANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

WHARE

WHAKAAKORANGA Ahunga Tikanga (Māori Laws & Philosophy)

Ahunga Tikanga (Māori Laws & Philosophy)

Poutāhū (Postgraduate) and Tāhuhu (Master)

Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

One year diploma (NZQA Level 8), Three year master (NZQA Level 9)

One year diploma (NZQA Level 5), Three year bachelor’s degree (NZQA level 7)

Residential seminars, self-directed learning and online delivery

Residential seminars, self-directed learning and online delivery

March start date

March start date

Fees apply

Fees apply

The Poutāhū graduate will be able to explain cosmogony as the basis of tikanga prior to contact with Western influences.

The Māori Laws & Philosophy/Ahunga Tikanga undergraduate programme examines Māori legal systems which existed prior to contact with Pākehā to reveal the presence of tikanga as a highly successful and self-contained law.

The authenticity of certain texts and materials on Māori cosmogony and tikanga will also be considered. Reinterpretations of tikanga that have flowed from interaction between tikanga Māori and Pākehā law are examined and deconstructed and tauira will enquire into the potential for tikanga to underpin contemporary developments and strategies. The Tāhuhu Ahunga Tikanga graduate will be able to explain tikanga tuku iho and assist with the establishment and maintenance of institutions (and institutional arrangements) that are driven and assessed by the principles and application of tikanga tuku iho. They will be able to investigate the origins, principles and practices of tikanga prior to contact with Western influences, describe the origins of Pākehā law and its impact on tikanga Māori, and explain the place of tikanga Māori alongside the laws and philosophies of other peoples. Graduates of Poutāhū and, Tāhuhu Ahunga Tikanga will have the potential to be researchers, teachers and practitioners, particularly among their own people. Note: This course will be run subject to numbers.

CAREER PATHWAYS Independent researcher, Project researcher, Lecturer, Advisor, Educator, Mentor, Kaiāwhina, Reo Revitalisation, Post Treaty settlement capacity building.

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Students will analyse the impact of Pākehā values on Māori legal systems and critique legal processes encountered in contemporary times. The programme aims to produce graduates that engage acquired knowledge to discuss and address issues impacting on whānau, hapū, iwi, particularly among their own people. The Diploma/Heke programme explores the concept of whakapapa as the foundation of Māori Laws which consider fundamental principles of tikanga including whanaungatanga, utu, tapu and noa. Year two studies investigate the period of initial contact with Pākehā, analyse documents such as He Wakaputanga o Te Rangatiratanga o Nu Tireni and Te Tiriti o Waitangi and evaluate the viability of the Waitangi Tribunal and Māori Land Court. Note: This course will be run subject to numbers.

CAREER PATHWAYS Heke: Independent researcher, Project researcher Poutuarongo: Independent researcher, Project researcher, Cultural advisor, Hapū/Iwi executive, Kaitakawaenga, Kaiāwhina, Reo Revitalisation, Post Treaty settlement capacity building.


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Whakaakoranga (Māori Medium Teaching)

Whakaakoranga (Māori Medium Teaching)

Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Poutāhū (Postgraduate Diploma) and Tāhuhu (Master)

One year diploma (NZQA Level 5), Three year bachelor’s degree (NZQA level 7)

One year postgraduate diploma (NZQA Level 8), Two year master’s degree (NZQA Level 9)

Residential seminars, self directed and online learning

Residential seminars, self directed learning

March start date

March start date

Fees apply

Fees apply

With the rapid growth in kaupapa Māori learning institutions and schools offering kaupapa Māori education programmes demand is increasing for well-trained and qualified Māori teachers.

The Poutāhū and Tāhuhu Whakaakoranga programmes will provide you with the competencies and confidence to take a strong leadership role in both managerial and delivery aspects of kaupapa Māori learning environments.

Te Wānanga o Raukawa offers you an innovative three year teaching degree, Poutuarongo Whakaakoranga. This programme produces graduates who can teach people to see the world through Māori eyes and are competent to teach a range of subjects using the Māori language.

The Poutāhū Whakaakoranga focuses on delivery and teaching, advanced iwi and hapū research and te whakatupu i te reo Māori. The second year of the Master’s programme builds further on these kaupapa and emphasises effective management and leadership within kaupapa Māori learning institutions.

The Heke Whakaakoranga is awarded to those who successfully complete the first year of study. These programmes are approved by the Education Council Aotearoa. Teach NZ study awards are available for those wanting to study the degree.

CAREER PATHWAYS Poutuarongo: Kaiwhakaako Māori, Education Advisor, Primary School Teacher, Secondary School Teacher, Special Education Teacher, Tertiary Lecturer, Policy Analyst

These programmes are approved by the Education Council of Aotearoa. Teach NZ study awards are available for those wanting to study the above programmes.

CAREER PATHWAYS School Principal, Tertiary Lecturer, Māori Education Specialist, Education Advisor, Senior Kaiwhakaako Māori, Policy Analyst, Policy Advisor, Māori Language Specialist.

Heke: Teacher Aide, Childcare Worker.

WHARE WHAKAAKORANGA

Note: This course is delivered in te reo Māori

FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES AND FEES VISIT WWW.WANANGA.COM

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

WHARE

WHAKAAKORANGA I’ve learnt about māoritanga and what that means to us as future teachers. Learning through kaupapa tuku iho, I want to be able to influence and make a change within my iwi. I’ve really enjoyed the placements, while studying this tohu – you have no choice but to get in to it and apply what you’re learning. To see and experience the difference teachers make is the best feeling.

Tamati-James Wilson Nō Ngāti Kuia, Ngāti Apa ki te Rā Tō, Rangitāne, Ngā Puhi, Ngāti Porou, Ngāti Tūwharetoa, Ngāti Kahungunu Heke Te Rangakura I’ve always wanted to teach my own, they’re my passion behind this tohu and becoming a teacher. All my whānau have been to Te Wānanga o Raukawa; they were the ones who influenced me to come and study here, they said it was awesome and they were right. My playground growing up was Te Hora Marae. In time I’m hoping to take back what I’ve learnt to my iwi, hapū, rohe to teach my own. My iwi have been a big help through scholarships and support and this is my way of giving back to them.

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Our tutors are amazing, over the year they get to know their students really well, and how you learn so they teach us relevant skills that we can then apply in the classrooms. The tutors would give us lots of examples through a simulated classroom environment, I found learning this way helped me learn. I’ve completed the Heke and will graduate with my degree. One day I hope to be a teacher within my rohe and help revitalise our culture in Te Tau Ihu and support kaupapa in the wider community. If you’re passionate about tamariki and making a difference in people’s lives, this tohu is perfect for you. It all starts with our children.

In time I’m hoping to take back what I’ve learnt to my iwi, hapū, rohe to teach my own. My iwi have been a big help through scholarships and support and this is my way of giving back to them.


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Te Rangakura Kaiwhakaako (Bilingual Teaching) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor) One year diploma (NZQA Level 5), Three year bachelor’s degree (NZQA level 7) Residential seminars, self directed and online learning March start date

“I’m hoping to take back what I’ve learnt to my iwi, hapū and rohe to teach my own.” Tamati-James Wilson Poutuarongo Te Rangakura, Tau Tuarua

Fees apply Poutuarongo Te Rangakura Kaiwhakaako will provide you with the necessary knowledge, attitudes and skills needed to access and pass on ngā taonga tuku iho. This mātauranga is drawn from the study of iwi and hapū values, knowledge and institutions in a way that is consistent with the notion of a Māori world view curriculum and its application in the kaupapa Māori educational context. The Heke Te Rangakura Whakaakoranga, Diploma of Bilingual Teaching, is awarded to those who successfully complete the first year of study. These programmes are approved by the Education Council of Aotearoa. Teach NZ study awards are available for those wanting to study the degree.

CAREER PATHWAYS

WHARE WHAKAAKORANGA

Kaiwhakaako (Bilingual), Primary School Teacher, Private Teacher / Tutor, Special Education Teacher, Curriculum Advisor, Education Union Representative, Policy Analyst

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

WHARE

WHAKAAKORANGA Whakaakoranga Kōhungahunga (Early Childhood Teaching) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor) One year diploma (NZQA Level 5), Three year bachelor’s degree (NZQA level 7)

Āmua, ka taea e te akonga te whakaako i roto i ngā whare kōhungahunga o te motu. Ka taea anō te whai atu i te tohu paerua. Nā te Matatū Aotearoa i whakaae ēnei tohu. He pai ēnei tohu mō ngā karahipi Teach NZ.

Residential seminars, self directed and online learning

CAREER PATHWAYS

March start date

Heke: Teacher Aide, Childcare Worker

Fees apply

Poutuarongo: Kaiwhakaako Māori, Education Advisor, Early Childhood Teacher, Private Teacher / Tutor, Special Education Teacher, Tertiary Lecturer.

Ka whakahaerehia katoatia te tohu nei mā te reo Māori me te reo Pākehā, ā, ka whakatūria he Whare Kōhanga Akoranga e taketake ake nei i te mātauranga Māori. Mā te mōhio, mā te mātau, mā te mārama ki te mātauranga Māori me te ao Māori e taea ai te whakarite i tētehi marautanga kōhungahunga e tupu ai te aronga Māori ki roto ki ngā tamariki. Ka hua mai, ko te pouako: –– E mārama ana ki ngā taonga tuku iho a ngā tūpuna –– E mātau ana ki te kawe i tētehi marautanga kōhungahunga mā te reo Māori –– E mātau ana ki te whakaako ki ngā kura kōhungahunga –– E mārama ana ki te whakatupu i te mana āhua ake o ia tamaiti, o ia tamaiti –– E mātau ana ki te whakarite, te whakamahere, me te whakahaere i ngā mahi o te kura kōhungahunga e aro ā-Māori atu ngā tamariki ki tōna ao –– E mōhio ana ko ngā mātua ngā pouako tuatahi, ā ko te kāinga te kura tuatahi mō ngā tamariki, nō reira me whai wāhi ka tika ngā mātua me te whānau whānui.

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

I’ve come back to study to gain a qualification. I wanted to validate to myself that I am capable, have credibility and understanding of what I am aware of. Whilst I’ve had many years’ experience in law and been involved in kaupapa Māori, I’ve never had a tohu that shows that!

Nō Ngāti Porou, Te Arawa, Ngāti Tūwharetoa Heke Ahunga Tikanga I’ve always wanted to study full time and when I was looking for a degree to complete, Ahunga Tikanga was the one that really resonated with me. This is what brought me to Te Wānanga o Raukawa, they are the only one who offer a tohu like this. I grew up in Reporoa with my parents and koroua. I am a descendant of Ngāti Whaoa and Ngāti Tahu of that area. I am married to Tony who descends from Ngāti Whakaue of Te Arawa and together we have three children who all attend Te Kura Kaupapa Māori o Ruamata. We are both passionate about tō tātau reo rangatira me ōna tikanga and mana motuhake. I am actively involved on several trusts including marae reservations and ahu whenua and sit on a few boards.

The wānanga provides you with the tools however the best thing is going home, spending time at your marae and talking to your whānau and kaumātua. Ahunga Tikanga coupled with iwi and hapū studies provides an opportunity to learn and apply to your home and work. My goal is to retire at 60 but until then I’ll graduate with my Poutuarongo Ahunga Tikanga next year and will look at starting my masters. There is a time and a place for everything; I’m ready. Whāia te iti kahurangi ka tuohu koe me he maunga teitei!

The concepts I am learning are helping me to provide a better understanding to myself, my whānau, hapū and the communities I am involved with about why we are in the predicaments we are in and the process of colonisation. It’s important to acknowlede this process so that we can move towards a better tomorrow. With Tikanga, it’s important to understand where we have come from and where we want to go. The quality of tutors who we have had access to and who I’ve been privileged to meet while completing this degree has been amazing. The manaakitanga and the way we are taught helps clear the space to be able to focus on the learning. The pūkenga on this tohu give so much of themselves; they are living

WHARE WHAKAAKORANGA

Dorothy Te Marama Rāroa

The quality of tutors who we have had access to and who I’ve been privileged to meet while completing this degree has been amazing.

and breathing examples of how we should be living, they go out of their way to manaaki or assist to help you achieve.

www.wananga.com

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WHARE KOKIRI

Kia Māori ā tātou mokopuna – That our descendants be distinctively Māori

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

WHARE KŌKIRI COURSES

Mātauranga Māori Poutāhū (Postgraduate Diploma), Tāhuhu (Master)

Mātauranga Māori Heke (Diploma), Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Whakahaere (Management) Poutāhū (Postgraduate Diploma) and Tāhuhu (Master)

Puna Maumahara (Information Management) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Toko Mana (Administration) Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Karanga Poupou (Certificate) TALK TO US ABOUT OPTIONS FOR DELIVERING THIS PROGRAMME IN COHORTS* AT A MARAE NEAR YOU.

Tū Whaikōrero Poupou (Certificate) TALK TO US ABOUT OPTIONS FOR DELIVERING THIS PROGRAMME IN COHORTS* AT A MARAE NEAR YOU.

WHARE KŌKIRI

* Minimum numbers apply.

FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES AND FEES VISIT WWW.WANANGA.COM

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

WHARE KOKIRI Mātauranga Māori

Mātauranga Māori

Tāhuhu (Master)

Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

E rua ngā tau te roa mō te Tāhuhu (NZQA Levels 8 and 9)

One year diploma (NZQA Level 5), Three year bachelor’s degree (NZQA level 7)

Noho, ako takitahi

Residential seminars, self directed and online learning

Poutū-te-rangi ka tīmata

March start date

Ko te whāinga nui o tēnei tohu, kia tupu, kia rangatira tā tātou wānanga, me tā tātou kawe i te mātauranga. Hua atu, kia rangatira hoki tā tātou whakaahua i te wānanga nei ki te reo Māori. E toru ngā akoranga nui o te tohu nei: –– Ngā akoranga o te mātauranga –– Ngā tikanga o te rangahau –– Ngā tikanga o te reo Māori Ka tīmata te tau ako i te Poutū-te-rangi, ka mutu ā te Whiringa-ā-nuku. E ono ngā noho i te tau, e whā rā te roa mō te nuinga. Ka whakahaerengia ana ngā wānanga i roto i te reo Māori, ka mutu, me reo Māori hoki ngā tuhinga a ngā ākonga. Mā Te Wānanga o Raukawa koe e whakaruruhau, e whāngai ki te kai inā tae mai koe ki ngā noho. Mō te roanga ake o ngā whakamārama mō tēnei akoranga, toro atu ki www.wananga.com.

CAREER PATHWAYS Kaiwhakaako – kura tuarua, whare wānanga, Kaitohutohu – tikanga me te reo Māori, Kaitohutohu tikanga ā-iwi, Kairangahau, Kaiwhakapāoho, Kaiwhakahaere ki ngā rōpū tuku iho, Reo Revitalisation.

Fees apply Studies in Mātauranga Māori will introduce you to understandings of human behaviour based on concepts handed down through generations of Māori. Te whakamāramatanga o ngā tikanga tuku iho e puta ai te titiro a te Māori ki tōna ao. Learn about kaupapa and tikanga Māori that define the way we view the world as Māori. Explore Māori knowledge as our tūpuna understood it, as we understand it today and as it will be applied tomorrow. The Heke Mātauranga Māori examines ngā tikanga tuku iho, Māori art and design concepts, iwi oral traditions and Te Tiriti o Waitangi. You will undertake research about your marae and develop your te reo Māori skills, including mihimihi, waiata and karakia. The Heke Awa, Raukawa and Toa Rangatira is a tailored programme specific to mātauranga Māori of the founding iwi of Te Wānanga o Raukawa, Te Āti Awa ki Whakarongotai, Ngāti Raukawa ki te Tonga and Ngāti Toa Rangatira. Years two and three of the Poutuarongo Mātauranga Māori expand further on ngā taonga tuku iho and incorporate more indepth studies in kaitiakitanga, tohungatanga, roles on the marae, paepae and science and technology in the mātauranga Māori context.

CAREER PATHWAYS Heke: Exhibition Technician, Library Assistant, Iwi / Hapū Representative Poutuarongo: Case Manager, Historian, Project Researcher, Cultural Advisor, Special Education Tutor, Tertiary Lecturer, Policy Advisor, Policy Analyst, Tourism / Hospitality Advisor, Reo Revitalisation.

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Ko nga kaupapa ake o tōku iwi te kaupapa i noho hei tikitiki mōku. I te korenga o te haere atu ki Te Wānanga o Raukawa, kua kore au e mōhio ki te tino mana o tōku ake kāinga. Kua kore pea he wāhi atu i a Te Wānanga o Raukawa i taea tonu te whakamārama ko wai ahau. Nā, kua mōhio ahau ki a au anō.

Poutuarongo Mātauranga Māori E aku mātua tīpuna nō te Takapau o Ngāti Kahungunu, te hunga i waiho mai te reo Māori me ngā tikanga ki te marae o Rākautātahi, ka tapakō, ka tirihou aku kupu whakamihi ki Te Wānanga o Raukawa e poipoi ana i ngā pūkenga kei roto i ahau. Kua toru tau ahau i Te Wānanga o Raukawa e kimi, e ruku ana i ngā ara hōhonu o te Mātauranga Māori. Te ara i takahia e aku tuākana i mua tonu i ahau. Nā tēnei huarahi i whāia e mātou, kua marake te kitea ki te ao o waho atu i tōku i mohio ai, te ao pakupaku nei o te rangatahi.

Nāku iti nei, te putiputi o Rongomaiwahine.

“Ko Puera kei runga, ko Whatuma kei raro!”

WHARE KŌKIRI

Te Ao Marama Ngarotata

He kaiako ahau ki Te Kura Kaupapa Māori o Takapau. He nui aku herenga ki ngā mahi nui o tōku ake iwi o Ngāti Kahungunu. Heoi, mō te whakapono, ko ngā tamariki ngā rangatira o ināianei rangi, ko au tēnā e whakawhiu ana i te kākano i whakatōhia mai e Te Wānanga o Raukawa ki roto ki tēnei, ka whakatōhia ki ngā tamariki o tōku ake hapū. Ko te kākano tērā o te ‘Mātauranga o te Māori’.

www.wananga.com

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WHARE KOKIRI Whakahaere (Management)

Puna Maumahara (Information Management)

Poutāhū (Postgraduate Diploma) and Tāhuhu (Master)

Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Two years full time Tāhuhu (or part time equivalent) One year full time Poutāhū (NZQA Levels 8 & 9)

One year diploma (NZQA Level 5), Three year bachelor’s degree (NZQA level 7)

Residential seminars, self-directed learning and online classes

Residential seminars, self directed AND online learning

March start date

March start date

Fees apply

Fees apply

Take management to a whole new level as this qualification prepares you for senior and executive management roles within any organisation.

Puna Maumahara develops bilingual and bicultural managers of Māori information resources in organisations.

Of particular value are the skills you will gain with specialist knowledge in Māori language and tikanga combined with the functions of planning, organising, leading and controlling in conjunction with human resource management, marketing, communications, law and project management. You will be well sought after! You will conduct comprehensive studies into the way businesses are operated and managed, undertake research on your marae and contribute to the future planning and development of whānau, hapū and iwi resource management. Graduates of this programme may also be interested in: –– Puna Maumahara (Information Management) –– Ahunga Tikanga (Māori Laws and Philosophy) –– Mātauranga Māori

CAREER PATHWAYS Middle and Senior Management Roles, Business Owner/ Operator, Marketing Advisor, Communication Advisor, Chief Executive Officer, Human Resource Manager, Business Advisor.

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Design, implement and manage information systems to suit whakapapa based rōpū, other Māori groups and organisations. The Heke Puna Maumahara is a one year introductory course into the foundations of mātauranga Māori and information management. You will also conduct a study on your marae and build te reo Māori skills, including mihimihi, waiata and karakia. Years two and three of the Poutuarongo Puna Maumahara degree expand on best practice methods for reporting, database administration, file management and storage. Apply kaupapa Māori principles to information management and look further into the activities of your hapū and iwi. Continue to progress in te reo Māori and learn to utilise your skills in hui planning and organisation, and communication management.

CAREER PATHWAYS Heke: Exhibition Technician, Library Assistant, Information Management Advisor Poutuarongo: Historian, Project Researcher, Records/ Archives Manager, Cultural Advisor, Curator, Educator/ Lecturer, Librarian.


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Ko Ngāti Pāhauwera o Ngāti Kahungunu, Ngāi Tūhoe me Ngāti Huia aku iwi. Kāore i tua atu i a Raukawa te wānanga i ngā kaupapa o te ao Māori. Ko aku noho ki Te Wānanga o Raukawa he whakaoranga mōku, he rongoā mō taku wairua. Ka whai wāhi e mātou ngā tauira ki te wānanga i ngā kaupapa katoa i roto i te reo Māori, e whakaaro nui ana mō te wā o nehe, arā te wā o ngā mātua.

Migoto Eria Tāhuhu Mātauranga Māori, Tau Tuatahi

E hāngai tōtika ana ēnei akoranga ki tōku ake mahi i roto i ngā whare taonga. Hei muri i ngā noho, kua hoki ora mai ahau ki te mahi, kī katoa taku kete i ngā tini āhuatanga o te ao Māori. Ka taea e

au te manaaki te tiaki hoki i ngā mauri o ērā atu, i te mea kua whāngaia, manaakihia ahau e ngā noho ki te Wānanga o Raukawa. Nōku te waimarie he tino koi aku hoa tauira i roto i a Tāhuhu Mātauranga Māori. Mīharo katoa au i ngā tini āhuatanga i puta mai i aua wānanga, kaha kitea ngā pūkenga o tēnā, o tēna o aku hoa tauira. He kaha nō rātou ki te awhi, te tiaki i a tātou anō. Koirā ki te nui i te mutunga iho, ko te manaakitanga me te aroha, i te wā e noho tawhiti ana i te kāinga me ō mātou ake whānau, tamariki anō hoki.

“Ko aku noho ki Te Wānanga o Raukawa he whakaoranga mōku, he rongoā mō taku wairua.”

WHARE KŌKIRI

Migoto Eria Tāhuhu Mātauranga Māori, Tau Tuatahi

www.wananga.com

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WHARE KOKIRI Toko Mana (Administration)

Karanga

Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Poupou (Certificate)

Three years full time Poutuarongo (or part time equivalent) or one year full time Heke (NZQA Levels 5 & 7)

Course dates vary depending on location (NZQA Level 4)

Residential seminars, self-directed learning and online classes March start date

Four weekend residential seminars AND self directed learning 18 week course Zero Fees

Fees apply Toko Mana will prepare you for the administrative leadership and planning roles within organisations and businesses. Learn about kaupapa Māori definitions of management and leadership, and how to develop effective administrative processes to help achieve organisational goals and objectives. Heke Toko Mana examines the roles of managers and administrators as organisational leaders. You will undertake research about your marae and develop te reo Māori skills, including mihimihi, waiata and karakia. Years two and three of the Poutuarongo Toko Mana expand further on administrative process and leadership in decision making, human resource, Māori enterprise, change management and setting and maintaining organisational standards. You will develop and nurture your own identity through carrying out in-depth studies with your hapū, expanding your Māori language skills and learning how to implement te reo Māori as an administrative leader within your organisation. Graduates of this programme may also be interested in: –– Whakahaere (Management) –– Puna Maumahara (Information Management) –– Matāuranga Māori

CAREER PATHWAYS Heke: Receptionist, Administrator, Clerical Worker, Personal Assistant Poutuarongo: Senior Administrator, Policy Analyst, Office Manager, Business Owner, Marketing Assistant. *Minimum numbers apply

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Using the rich heritage of te iwi Māori you will call upon the knowlege of ngā tūpuna wāhine and examine the values and principles of pūrākau (Māori legend stories) and their relevance to karanga. Poupou Karanga aims to bring forth your creativity and instil a deep appreciation of this traditional art form. Participate in discussions around karanga and share experiences in a safe and welcoming environment. Draw on the wealth of knowledge from expert kaikaranga and develop your practical skills. Learn how you can support your whānau, hapū and iwi through the karanga art form. Talk to us about options for delivering this programme in cohorts* at a marae near you.

CAREER PATHWAYS Kaikaranga, Tutor, Cultural Advisor.


TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

Tū Whaikōrero Poupou (Certificate) Course dates vary depending on location (NZQA Level 5) Residential seminars, self directed learning Feb & July start dates Zero fees Whaikōrero is both an art form and mode of communication. As an art form, whaikōrero should exhibit all of te ihi (wonder), te kaha (power), te huatau (elegance), and te wana (the thrill) that Māori performing arts in general achieve and cause the audience to react to in wehi (excitement) and ranga wairua (inspiration). As a mode of communication, whaikōrero uses poetry, proverb, incantation, metaphor, imagery and symbolism to give gravity and formality to occasions of significance upon which the mana of the two parties of the marae encounter rests. It has its origins in a Māori belief system. This certificate programme is for those who have an intermediate level (or above) ability in Te Reo Māori and some experience in whaikōrero. The aim of the course is to enhance your capability in whaikōrero, both as an art form and mode of communication, in various situations. This will be achieved by adding to your kete kōrero in the various sections of whaikōrero and through instruction in the use of voice, stance, rākau and other delivery methods. Talk to us about options for delivering this programme in cohorts* at a marae near you.

CAREER PATHWAYS

WHARE KŌKIRI

Kaikōrero, Tutor, Cultural Advisor.

*Minimum numbers apply

www.wananga.com

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O E R E T I R O A M

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

“What you learn when you learn te reo is so much more than a language.” Paul Whatuira Poupou Huia Te Reo

TE REO MĀORI

Te Reo Māori Poutāhū (Postgraduate Diploma) and Tāhuhu (Master)

Te Reo Māori Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Huia te Reo – Te Hōkairangi (Online) Poupou (Certificate)

Huia Te Reo (Online)

TE REO MĀORI

Poupou (Certificate)

FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES AND FEES VISIT WWW.WANANGA.COM

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

TE REO MAORI Te Reo Māori

Te Reo Māori

Poutāhū (Postgraduate Diploma) and Tāhuhu (Master)

Heke (Diploma) and Poutuarongo (Bachelor)

Te Wā Tīmata Poutū-te-rangi

One year diploma (NZQA level 5), Three year bachelor’s degree (NZQA level 7)

Te Utu He utu mō tēnei akoranga. Waeahia atu ki 0800 WANANGA mō ngā whakamārama

Daily classes, residential seminars AND self directed learning

He tohu paerua tēnei e pā ana ki te reo Māori, arā tōna ingoa ko te Tāhuhu Reo Māori. E rua tau te roa. He tohu whakatupu i te whakaaro mō te reo Māori o ngā tūpuna. Ka rangahaua ngā kōrero o neherā kia kitea ai te āhua o te reo i a rātou, ā, i tō rātou nā wā. Mā ēnei mahi e whakawhānui te kōrero me te tuhituhi a te ākonga. He kaupapa rangahau tōmua tēnei mā te tauira e anga nui mai ana ki ōna āhuatanga, ā, me whai tohu paetahi, me ōrite rānei ngā pūkenga. Ka mutu, me wairua rangahau, me mōhio ki te tuhi i te reo Māori, ā, me mātua mōhio ki te reo Māori. Mō te roanga ake o ngā whakamārama mō tēnei akoranga, toro atu ki www.wananga.com

CAREER PATHWAYS Kaiwhakaako i te reo Māori, Kaitohutohu Reo Māori, Kairangahau, Kaiwhakahaere Kaupapa Mahi, Kaiwhakawhitiwhiti reo Māori, Te Reo Māori Translator, Reo Revitalisation.

Course dates vary depending on location Fees apply The revival and maintenance of te reo and tikanga Māori is a pursuit of Te Wānanga o Raukawa and a key focus of our language programmes. Iwi and hapū studies feature at both the diploma and degree level. You will attend daily classes as well as a number of residential seminars, or noho, throughout the year. Heke Reo Māori introduces you to the Māori language and develops your confidence in speaking, listening and understanding te reo, as well as Māori concepts and values. On completion of year one you will have the foundations of the language, be competent in conversational reo, and gained skills in mihimihi, karakia, waiata and kōrero. Poutuarongo Reo Māori expands on the diploma level programme and aims for you to achieve a high proficiency in te reo and tikanga Māori. As a graduate you will be well positioned to enter postgraduate level studies of te reo Māori, or undertake further study towards a range of careers, including teaching, broadcasting, research and policy development.

CAREER PATHWAYS Kaiwhakaako i te reo Māori, Primary School Te Reo Māori Teacher, Private Teacher / Tutor, Cultural Advisor, Lecturer, Policy Advisor, Reo Revitalisation.

FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES AND FEES VISIT WWW.WANANGA.COM

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

The reo is a taonga; halt the decline and revive

Huia Te Reo – Te Hōkairangi (Online)

Huia Te Reo (Online)

Poupou (Certificate)

Poupou (Certificate)

20 weeks online (NZQA Level 5)

20 weeks online (NZQA Level 4)

March and July start dates

March and July start dates

FREE to citizens, permanent residents and domestic students of Aotearoa, New Zealand.

FREE to citizens, permanent residents and domestic students of Aotearoa, New Zealand.

Poupou Huia Te Reo – Te Hōkairangi teaches everyday Māori language relevant to the home, the whānau and the wider community.

Poupou Huia Te Reo is a 20 week online Māori language course suited to language learners at the beginner to intermediate level.

It is the sequel to our Poupou Huia Te Reo level 4 online certificate. The only pre-requisite to entry into Poupou Huia Te Reo - Te Hōkairangi is that applicants have completed the Level 4 certificate.

Poupou Huia Te Reo is a 20 week online Māori language course suited to language learners at the beginner to intermediate level. Follow the daily activities of a real whānau through a series of audio lessons and carry out fun online activities to reinforce your learnings. Listen to adaptions of well-known fairytales and engage with peers and tutors online.

The programme is suited to advanced beginner to intermediate levels, so there is something for everyone. You don’t have to sit at the computer to do this; download and listen to the audio while commuting to work, spend your lunch break doing activities, or when the tamariki have gone to bed. The best thing about this course is that you can learn in your own time, at your own pace and with others. Graduates of this programme may also be interested in further studies: –– Reo –– Matāuranga Māori

CAREER PATHWAYS Teacher Aide, Tutor or further study.

Learn language that you can use in the home, at work and in everyday situations. Discover how to talk about common activities in a way that reflects Māori ways of thinking and doing things. To enrol in this course you will require regular access to the internet and an email address. Course resources are accessed online. Communications for the course occur through email and in online forums. We recommend you dedicate approximately 12 hours a week to listening activities, exercises and online interaction with others. Additionally students should spend an hour or more each day applying learning to their everyday activities. Graduates of this programme may also be interested in further studies: –– Huia te Reo – Te Hōkairangi –– Reo –– Matāuranga Māori

CAREER PATHWAYS Teacher Aide, Tutor or further studies.

www.wananga.com

TE REO MĀORI

Follow the daily activities of a whānau through a series of audio lessons and online activities to teach commonly used phrases, words and useful constructions. Additionally, traditional Māori pūrākau are used to help further develop language and understanding of the Māori world view. Language learned is immediately applicable to activities in the home, work and community; learning is supported by regular usage as you perform your everyday activities.

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TE REO MAORI Learning te reo Māori online has not only helped me learn a language it's helped me to learn about myself and my culture. In a lot of ways it has saved me.

Paora Khan Whatuira Nō Tainui, Ngāti Kahungunu Poupou Huia Te Reo

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As part of a healing process, I knew I needed to learn about my culture. This was something that was missing from my childhood growing up in Wainuiomata. I learnt how to survive, how to be tough and while this helped me to be a warrior on the league field, I was far from it off the field. Living in another country is not easy when you decide that you want to go back to your roots, so when I saw that Te Wānanga o Raukawa were offering an online course, I took up the opportunity. In 2016 I enrolled in Poupou Huia te Reo and have not looked back. My goal was to learn the basics and keep going. What you learn when you learn te reo is so much more than a language. I’m finally learning about my culture and my heritage which I’d like to pass on to my daughter Gabrielle someday.

Most people may think language learning online is a challenge, and it is, but there’s great support from the tutors at the wānanga who take the time to stay in touch through regular emails and phone calls. While my biggest challenge at the moment is to practise speaking or even finding someone here in Australia to kōrero to, I would encourage everybody to give it a go. It’s a fun, interactive way of learning that fits around my busy life as a motivational speaker and Educational Wellbeing Officer for the NRL West Tigers. I graduated from Poupou Huia Te Reo last year and am now taking up the next challenge, the next level, Te Hōkairangi. One day I hope to move back home to Aotearoa but for now I can at least continue on my journey of learning the language of our ancestors. Ko te kai a te rangatira he kōrero.


TE REO MĀORI

TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

www.wananga.com

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TE WĀNANGA O RAUKAWA PROSPECTUS 2018

SCHOLARSHIPS There are a number of scholarships, grants and awards you can apply for to support you while you’re studying. They’re a great way to ease the financial burden and allow you to concentrate on achieving your goals whether for personal growth, educational achievement, whānau development or all of the above. Check out the information below for closing dates and how to apply. For the most up-to-date information or to find out more, refer to our website www.wananga.com/scholarships.

TE HINEMANU RUAKĀ TE UPOKOIRI CHARITABLE TRUST SCHOLARSHIP

Supporting school leavers wanting to learn and teach te reo Māori and Māori history. Applications close 30 November. For students from Te Āti Awa ki Whakarongotai, Ngāti Raukawa ki te Tonga and Ngāti Toa Rangatira. One scholarship per ART hapū is available each year for those studying towards their diploma in Reo Māori. Closing date for applications is early March.

HEKE REO MĀORI ART SCHOLARSHIP

There are a number of other scholarships offered by Te Wānanga o Raukawa. Please refer to our webpage for the most up-to-date information.

ŌTAKI AND PORIRUA TRUSTS BOARD SCHOLARSHIPS

Supporting students under 20 years of age and attending secondary school or undertaking tertiary level study. Application period is 1 September to the day before Labour Day (usually the third week in October).

NGĀTI TOA RANGATIRA EDUCATION GRANT

Available for descendants of Ngāti Toa Rangatira who are pursuing tertiary education at a recognised institute. Preference is given to those studying te reo Māori as an Iwi priority and the grant will contribute towards the cost of course fees.

NGĀTI WHAKAUE POSTGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS

Available to full time postgraduate studies in the area of Māori education, tikanga me te reo Māori, Māori health, Māori social and economic development including leader and entrepreneurship. Applicants must be enrolled at a recognised tertiary institute AND be of Ngāti Whakaue descent.

NGĀRIMU VC AND 28TH (MĀORI) BATTALION MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIPS

Supporting high achieving tertiary students of Māori descent and who possess characteristics that are considered consistent with those of the members of the 28th Māori Battalion. Applications close around the end of September.

SIR APIRANA NGATA MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIPS

Open to all Māori studying at a polytechnic, wānanga, university or other tertiary institution with preference given to descendants of Māori who served overseas during World War I. Applications open January and close at the beginning of May.

SIR HUGH KAWHARU SCHOLARSHIP

A number of scholarships from the Kawharu Foundation are available for full time students encouraging Māori leadership and whom have an interest in cultural heritage. Visit their website for more details www.kawharufoundation.org.nz.

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For more information on these scholarships visit www.wananga.com/index.php/ apply-to-study/scholarships

TOITŪ KAUPAPA MĀORI MĀTAURANGA (MĀORI EDUCATION TRUST)

A number of scholarships are available each year aimed at supporting the advancement of achievement in Māori education. Applications open November each year.

NEW ZEALAND FEDERATION OF GRADUATE WOMEN

A selection of awards are available to assist women in their educational pursuits. Postgraduate award applications open on 1 May, closing the end of July. The Susan Byrne Memorial Award for woman over 35 wanting to make a career change, awarded annually also closes the end of July.

TEACH NZ SCHOLARSHIPS

A range of scholarships to support entry into the teaching profession and teaching graduates. Application periods vary between October and March. Visit the Teach NZ website for scholarship information and how to apply.

NGĀTI KAHUNGUNU SCHOLARSHIPS AND INTERNSHIPS

General and research scholarships for iwi registered Ngāti Kahungunu descendants studying full-time in the third or final year of completing a degree, or doing post graduate study. Each year, applications open in February and close in May.

The following are a list of resources where you can search online databases for suitable scholarships, awards and grants relevant to your studies.

TAKOA DATABASE

An online information resource on iwi, government and private sector scholarships.

KIA ORA HAUORA SCHOLARSHIPS DATABASE

An online resource of scholarships for anyone studying to enter the health sector. A database of awards, grants and scholarships for people in Aotearoa, New Zealand.

GIVME

The database allows you to tailor your search to scholarships relevant to you and your specific study needs. givME can be accessed at most public libraries, please ask your local library staff. You can also access this database at Te Wānanga o Raukawa Ōtaki campus library.

www.wananga.com

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“Our people are our wealth develop and retain them”

T E G O T W O H

ENROLLED

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Kei a koe te kaha - It’s your choice

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Enrolling

Decide what study programme you want to enrol in. Information about our programmes are right here in the prospectus, on our website www.wananga.com or call us on 0800WANANGA (0800 926 2642).

Request an information pack by calling 0800 wananga and return it to us with either a verified copy of your full birth certificate or a verified copy of your passport. Post to: Te Tomonga, PO Box 119 Ōtaki 5542. You can also enrol online at www.wananga.com Once we receive your application we will contact you to discuss your enrolment.

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Fees You need to make sure that your fees are paid before the programme commences. Payment of your fees must be made within six weeks of confirmation of your enrolment. If you are applying for a scholarship grant apply as soon as possible or if you intend to pay for your course by student loan apply to www.studylink.govt.nz as soon as you enrol.

Follow us on social media Like us on facebook Follow us on Twitter Engage with us on LinkedIn Watch us on Youtube Follow us on instagram Download our Te Wānanga o Raukawa app from your devices app store

SHARE YOUR #TWOR STORIES

www.wananga.com

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Disclaimer: Every effort was made to ensure the accuracy of information in this publication is correct at the time of printing. For the most up-to-date details visit www.wananga.com Photo Credits: Norm Heke, Te Kawa Robb


144 Tasman Rd, PO Box 119, ÅŒtaki, Aotearoa www.wananga.com 0800 WANANGA


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