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留下足迹 发表于 2023-1-19 23:01
啥意思?没看懂呀?
难道新西兰的学校
指定必须都要学选
记得是今年开始,华人估计也不关注,工党绿党一路货色
不想贴链接
凑合看吧
“Obviously, I hope it happens sooner rather than later,” he said.
“I just think that te reo Māori and Māori culture enhances all of Aotearoa.”
In 2019, the Government announced it would make the teaching of New Zealand history a core part of the curriculum from years 1-10. The new curriculum will be introduced in 2023.
The move was met with resistance from some quarters, but the Government pushed ahead, regardless.
Davis said with the introduction of the new history curriculum “there was resistance until there was no resistance”.
He expected the same would be true of te reo – eventually.
In the meantime, the Government was expanding Te Ahu o te Reo Māori – a programme designed to raise the competency level of educators.
A total of 6190 participants have gone through the programme to date - including teachers - with the pilot running in four areas. There are immediate plans to extend the programme to 10 areas, and a goal to get 40,000 teachers through Te Ahu o te Reo by 2025.
Te Uepu Reo Māori group manager Kiritina Johnstone said the Ministry of Education was putting plans in place to expand Te Ahu o te Reo Māori, and ensure it could meet its goal of normalising te reo Māori across the early learning and schooling workforce by 2025.
Davis said the programme brought people on a journey, rather than forcing or pushing te reo Māori on them.
“If people aren’t quite ready for it, if they're not comfortable, then it could backfire.”
Te Pāti Māori co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer says making te reo Māori a compulsory subject is a long time overdue.
SIMON O'CONNOR/STUFF
Te Pāti Māori co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer says making te reo Māori a compulsory subject is a long time overdue.
Te Pāti Māori co-leader Debbie Ngārewa-Packer said the question should be: why wasn’t te reo already part of the core curriculum?
The party’s policy is to make te reo Māori a core curriculum subject in schools, up to year 10.
This includes requiring all primary schools to incorporate te reo into 25% of their curriculum by 2026 and 50% by 2030. That would be accompanied by $40 million for teachers to develop their reo.
Te reo Māori was an official language, belonged to the indigenous people of Aotearoa, and was part of Te Tiriti o Waitangi, Ngārewa-Packer said.
“A critical part of a student learning is knowing their own identity.”
Making te reo a core part of the curriculum couldn’t happen fast enough, she said.
“If not now, then when?”
Green Party policy also includes making te reo Māori part of the core curriculum. |
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