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  1. Truth-myths of New Zealand.Georgina Tuari Stewart - 2023 - Asian Journal of Philosophy 2 (1):1-16.
    This article probes the gap between different cultural perspectives in contemporary Aotearoa New Zealand, a nation-state founded on a bicultural encounter between indigenous Māori and settler British. One source of misunderstandings is a set of distorted versions of historical and social reality that have been promulgated through schooling and national media. These distortions of truth take the form of certain dubious, denigratory ideas about Māori, accepted as commonsense truth by Pākehā (European New Zealanders) to bolster their feelings of security and (...)
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  • Mäori in the science curriculum: Developments and possibilities.Georgina Stewart - 2005 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 37 (6):851–870.
    The aim of this paper is to examine the current state of development of Mäori science curriculum policy, and the roles that various discourses have played in shaping these developments. These discussions provide a background for suggestions about a possible future direction, and the presentation of a new concept for Mäori science education.
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  • Mäori in the Science Curriculum: Developments and possibilities.Georgina Stewart - 2005 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 37 (6):851-870.
    The aim of this paper is to examine the current state of development of Mäori science curriculum policy, and the roles that various discourses have played in shaping these developments. These discussions provide a background for suggestions about a possible future direction, and the presentation of a new concept for Mäori science education (note that in this paper this phrase refers to science that incorporates Mäori language and/or knowledge, rather than Mäori participation in science education).
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  • Tawhiao’s Unstated Heteroglossia: Conversations with Bakhtin.Carl Te Hira Mika & Sarah-Jane Tiakiwai - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 49 (9):854-866.
    In the face of land confiscations and other forms of imperialism characteristic of the 19th century in Aotearoa/new Zealand, the second Maori King Tawhiao devised a number of sayings that seem at first glance to be entirely mythical. Highly metaphorical and poetic, they appear to refer, as Bakhtin would have it in his discussion of the epic, to a language that is emotional, innately tied to a static mooring of pre-rational thought. Yet, in this paper we argue that a Maori (...)
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