Exploring whakaaro: A way of responsive thinking in Maori research

Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (8):795-803 (2018)
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Abstract

The experience of researching as a Māori student within academia will often raise questions about how and whether the student’s research privileges Māori world views and articulates culturally specific epistemologies. This study offers some theorising, from the perspectives of a Maori doctoral student and her Maori supervisor, on the metaphysical nature of research for Maori. It emphasises that there is a space for speculative, creative and responsive thinking as a central method in the student’s doctoral research and describes how access to free thinking has been only partly recognised in currently dominant methods of research. We describe this approach as ‘whakaaro’, and note its relationship to language itself, to the researcher and the interviewee, and in particular to the researcher’s intuitive and largely unknowable response to what an interviewee utters. In that act, the student envisages that she will expansively hint at the deep expression of the profoundly mysterious. Here, our thinking resonates with various Western and indigenous writings about research and adumbrates the potential of the whakaaro method without foreclosing against its various permutations.

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Citations of this work

A Maori il-logical ethics of the dark: An example with ‘trauma’.Carl Mika - 2021 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 53 (5):426-435.
A Maori il-logical ethics of the dark: An example with ‘trauma’.Carl Mika - 2021 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 53 (5):426-435.

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References found in this work

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Poetry, Language, Thought.Martin Heidegger - 1971 - New York: Harper & Row.
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