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Teaching stories - Where am I?

An exploration of the local context. Who is in your school community? Which Pacific group/s do they connect with? How are your students connected to their community?

Two teachers and a group of young children stand outside in colourful clothes.

Tags

  • AudienceSchool leadersKaiako
  • Resource LanguageEnglish

About this resource

This resource is part of the Tapasā series, which contains videos that encourage teachers, leaders, and schools to engage with the community to provide leaders with authentic, relevant learning experiences that relate to them, their whānau, and their culture.

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Teaching stories: Where am I?

These videos are stories of effective Pacific pedagogies. "Where am I?" includes ways to explore contexts such as learning from students, families, and the community, Pacific views and values, and how being a learner yourself can enrich your classrooms and schools.

Members of the Pacific community and the profession have come together to tell these stories and help support teachers in developing the knowledge to empower their Pacific learners. See how other teachers have put the Tapasā framework to use in their schools and get inspired for your own journey.

Gain advice and insight into how you can locate your practice in a cultural space. 

This video is about culturally located and responsive practice, identity, language, and recognising learners as individuals located within their cultures. 

Relevant turu: Turu 3

This video is about culturally located and responsive practice, identity, and language, and recognising learners as individuals located within their cultures. In this video, Ali Glasgow speaks about culturally located pedagogy: programmes that are delivered in the learner’s home language and reflect what learners would be learning in their homelands. Schools are challenged to learn what Pacific families consider to be valuable learning outcomes for their children and work from there. The video invites teachers to reflect on what they need to build into their programmes to ensure that Pacific learners will not lose their culture, language, or identity.

Reflections for individual teachers

As you watch this video, think about the keys to educational success for Pacific learners. 

  • Think of ways to acknowledge that Pacific learners are culturally located and how effective education embraces culture. How do you enhance your Pacific learners’ sense of identity and belonging and encourage them to actively embrace their culture and language? 
  • How will you explore Pacific cultural knowledge, theories, and values to support the development of culturally responsive theory and practice in your classroom? 
  • Think about how you can be more culturally responsive in your teaching. Reflect on your cultural knowledge and teaching as it relates to Pacific culture. How can you use your Pacific learners’ cultural knowledge and perspectives as a resource for teaching? 

Reflections for staff or departments

If you are a staff member or member of a department team, think about how you can contribute to a school curriculum that supports Pacific learners to achieve educational success and retain their Pacific culture. 

  • Share your thoughts about: 
    • why culturally responsive pedagogy is important 
    • how culture supports educational achievement 
    • the importance of teachers' attitudes and behaviour towards culturally diverse learners. 
  • How is your school creating a safe and supportive environment for staff to learn and grow relationships? What can your school do to connect with families and communities? 

A Tokelauan teacher shares how they use Pacific values to guide the curriculum in her early childhood setting. 

Relevant turu: Turu 3

This video is about culturally responsive pedagogy. The Tokelauan teacher in the video shares how they use Pacific values to guide the curriculum in her early childhood setting. Core Pacific values also guide responsive pedagogy through cultural relationships that include families and communities and connect their learners to the school environment. Rooted in culture and spiritual principles, culturally responsive pedagogy aims to link content to practice. 

Reflections for individual teachers

Culturally responsive pedagogy is grounded in cultural relationships. 

  • Think of conversations you have had about your own culturally responsive practices. Have they helped you reflect on your perspectives and biases? 
  • Being culturally responsive encourages learners to feel a sense of belonging and helps create a safe space where they feel respected, heard, and challenged. How are you responding to the diverse needs of your learners? 
  • As you prepare and deliver lessons, what can you do to ensure that your classroom is a culturally responsive setting? Think about how you can gain insights about your learners in a culturally responsive way and how to uncover their learning needs. 
  • How can you encourage your learners to devise a cultural education campaign that champions their favourite cause and give them the opportunity to present their project to class and discuss the role culture plays in societal change? 

Reflections for staff or departments

  • Do you have a Pacific plan for your school? If yes, how is the plan encouraging Pacific parents to participate in decision-making and shaping the future direction of your school? If not, is your school planning to create a Pacific plan in partnership with parents? 
  • Think about how your school includes Pacific cultural references in all aspects of reshaping the curriculum. How has your school acknowledged Pacific voices? 
  • Does your school deliver different forms of content? For example, could your school invite guest speakers or role models to share cultural and historical knowledge to capture student interest? This could help your staff who are struggling to engage with Pacific learners and is more effective than lessons or storytelling. 

Keshmin Reedy speaks about the challenges and opportunities of culturally responsive teaching.  

Relevant ethnicities: Cook Islands, Kiribati

Relevant turu: Turu 1, Turu 3

This video is about teaching with culture at the center. Keshmin Reedy, a teacher at Manurewa High School, speaks about the challenges and opportunities of culturally responsive teaching and how it has guided her to learn about and be part of Kiribati culture at school. Teaching with culture at the centre is about cultural relationships and reciprocal learning. Learning about different cultures also involves learning about communities. Encouraging learners to speak their home language, rather than English, is part of their personal identity. Teaching with culture at the centre also goes hand-in-hand with spirituality. Prayer is important to many Pacific people, and incorporating prayer into Pacific school activities is as deeply important to many Pacific learners as embracing their culture and language. 

Reflections for individual teachers

As you watch the video, think about the ways that culture has impacted your teaching and how you should anticipate culture shock. 

  • How can you include interactions that acknowledge diverse cultures in your classroom? How can you adjust your teaching approach so that it appeals to your Pacific learners? Think of pedagogical approaches that require cultural intelligence. 
  • Where and how can you seek out relevant information and advice to resourcefully adapt to the needs of Pacific learners? Share your own cultural assumptions. 
  • Do you have a story to share about how you anticipate cultural differences and how you will you address them before they become problems? In your story, describe the particular problem, how you intend to address it, and share strategies to address situations similar to those in the video. 

As a class activity, ask each learner to bring a dish from their culture and explain what the dish represents and why it has become a part of their culture. They could also share about celebrations that include their dish at home. Ask other learners what they know about the dish. Treat these dishes with respect, and consider using this activity as a lesson in cultural sharing. 

Reflections for staff or departments

If you are watching this story as a staff member or member of a department team, think about classroom learning and cultural relationships. 

  • How is your school supporting teachers to recognise the value of and include cultural learning? Is your school equipping them with knowledge and skills through culturally relevant programmes? 
  • How is your school preparing staff to be culturally responsive? How are you working collectively to lift achievement by responding to the learning styles and needs of Pacific learners? 
  • How are you being encouraged to think critically about your programmes, learning experiences, and coursework to prepare you to work successfully with diverse students, especially Pacific learners? 

This video discusses why Pacific learners need to see their cultures in their classrooms. 

Relevant turu: Turu 1, Turu 2

Pacific learners need to see their cultures in their classrooms. This video illustrates how schools should value Pacific cultures. Family context and culture are important components for Pacific learners. Valuing their identities, languages, and heritages is key to their educational success. Most Pacific learners are shy and not very confident about understanding who they are and where they come from, and the current system focuses primarily on achieving academic and educational aspirations. The video challenges schools to work differently and reciprocally.

Reflections for individual teachers

Plan to get to know your Pacific learners and how you will integrate their language and culture into your classroom environment. 

  • Do you know your learners as individuals? Learners also want to know about you and your life outside of school. Consider doing an activity based on personal storytelling. Share information about your own cultural identity and personal story. Encourage your learners to reciprocate. Share about your imperfections and the times you have made mistakes. This will help your learners feel more comfortable making mistakes, learning from them, and supporting strong relationships.
  • Another activity to encourage and support your learners to appreciate and acknowledge their own cultural identity is to broaden your approach to food tasting, favourite songs, music, and dance, learning a few Pacific words, or participating in an event that is meaningful to Pacific learners. Examples include participating in a wedding, a church service, a birthday celebration, or a community event like the market, a festival, or another Pacific community activity. 
  • Explore culturally appropriate teaching approaches and resources with learners to try to meet their needs from a cultural perspective. Work together with your learners to identify important features for a culturally responsive curriculum. Have discussions with your learners, and respond to their questions by giving feedback with relatable examples. Consider a buddy system for this activity to allow learners to support each other. Make connections to their culture and work with them to integrate ideas into classroom content. 

Reflections for staff or departments

If you are a staff member or member of a department team, think of your own expectations of Pacific learners. 

  • Explore how your school is delivering for its Pacific learners. How is your school supporting Pacific learners to value their culture, home language, religion, and values? 
  • How is your school supporting learners with English as a second language? What bilingual resources does your school provide? How do you use Pacific cultural activities as a learning context? 
  • Think about how your school develops teaching practice and works on an inquiry framework to examine classroom practices and identify strategies and approaches that make a difference for Pacific learners. 

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