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《Noho Taiao:与年轻人一起重拾毛利科学》。

Noho Taiao: reclaiming Māori science with young people.

机构信息

1 SHORE and Whāriki Reseach Group, Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand.

2 Te Aho Tū Roa, Te Tai Tokerau, Northland, New Zealand.

出版信息

Glob Health Promot. 2019 Apr;26(3_suppl):35-43. doi: 10.1177/1757975919829700.

Abstract

Connections and belonging to ancestral lands are strongly and consistently argued as fundamental to Māori education, health and wellbeing. When our connections with and access to health-promoting places of belonging are damaged, we lose more than component parts of wellbeing. An entire cultural infrastructure integral to identity, community, spirituality, sustainability and even material sustenance is eroded, compromising health, wellbeing and vitality. Young people in rural areas are often seen as missing out on the amenities and attractions available in cities, but are assumed to have compensatory access to and positive relationships with 'nature'. For multiple reasons, many arising from colonial legacies, this is often not so for young Māori and there are initiatives underway that seek to reconnect them with customary environments. Place-based learning approaches that use local environments and ecosystems as living laboratories, reimagining the way students engage with knowledge, science and understandings of the natural world can be valuable in this respect. Te Rārawa Noho Taiao projects in the Far North of Aotearoa have been operating for nearly a decade, using indigenous pedagogy that promotes Māori science, science leadership, and learning, applying them in ways that produce a range of health and wellbeing benefits. These include enhanced educational engagement, strengthened capabilities, increased participation/belonging, stronger connections, constructive peer processes and positive intergenerational interactions, all based in Māori values and praxis. Such elements are widely recognised in health-promoting frameworks as highly implicated in the creation and maintenance of health and wellbeing for individuals, communities and populations. In this paper, we use interviews with organisers and teachers of these Noho Taiao and a survey of student participants, to explore the educational and health promotion effects.

摘要

与祖先土地的联系和归属感被强烈且一致地认为是毛利人教育、健康和幸福的基础。当我们与促进健康的归属地的联系和获得这些归属地的机会受到损害时,我们失去的不仅仅是幸福感的组成部分。一整套与身份认同、社区、精神、可持续性甚至物质支持息息相关的文化基础设施被侵蚀,损害了健康、幸福感和活力。农村地区的年轻人往往被认为错过了城市中可用的便利设施和景点,但人们认为他们可以补偿性地接触和与“自然”建立积极的关系。由于多种原因,其中许多原因源于殖民遗产,这对于年轻的毛利人来说往往并非如此,因此正在开展一些倡议,试图让他们重新与传统环境建立联系。基于地方的学习方法利用当地环境和生态系统作为活的实验室,重新想象学生与知识、科学和对自然世界的理解的互动方式,在这方面可能具有价值。新西兰北地的 Te Rārawa Noho Taiao 项目已经运营了近十年,采用了促进毛利科学、科学领导力和学习的本土教育学,以产生一系列健康和幸福感益处的方式应用它们。这些益处包括增强教育参与度、增强能力、提高参与度/归属感、加强联系、建设性的同伴过程和积极的代际互动,所有这些都基于毛利价值观和实践。在促进健康的框架中,这些元素被广泛认为对个人、社区和人群的健康和幸福感的创造和维护具有重要影响。在本文中,我们使用对这些 Noho Taiao 的组织者和教师的访谈以及对学生参与者的调查,来探讨其教育和健康促进效果。

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