Filter By:
Applied filters
Publications
Search Data
M. Berryman (2009) Set Research information for teachers: The Te Kotahitanga effective teaching profile. New Zealand Council for Educational Research (NZCER)
Through interviews with Māori students, their teachers, and whānau, the authors learned about the characteristics of teachers that made a difference. They have drawn these together into the Effective Teaching Profile. Set Research Information for Teachers. Set 2009: no. 2 pp 27-33. New Zealand Council for Educational Research.
R. Bishop & M. Berryman & T. Cavanagh & L. Teddy (2009) Te Kotahitanga: Addressing educational disparities facing Māori students in New Zealand.. Elsevier Ltd
Te Kotahitanga and the addressing of educational disparities facing Māori students in New Zealand. The paper identifies how implementing the Te Kotahitanga Effective Teaching Profile addresses these disparities.
M. Berryman & S.Bateman (2007) Effective bicultural leadership: A way to restore harmony at school and avoid suspension. New Zealand Council for Educational Research (NZCER)
This paper examines how a mainstream school principal supported by a Māori elder undertook hui whakatika procedures with teachers and family, rather than standing down or suspending a group of boys. SET Research Information for Teachers, 2008 No. 1, 25-29. Available online.
T. Cavanagh & L. Teddy & D. O’Sullivan & M. Berryman & R. Bishop (2007) The Experiences of Year 4 and 5 Māori students in Primary School Classrooms. Final Report to the Ministry of Education. Ministry of Education Te Tāhuhu o te Mātauranga
This report (2007) explores factors that influence student achievement as experienced by Year 4 and 5 Māori students in mainstream primary schools. It draws on a series of in-depth interviews with Māori students themselves and those most intimately involved with their education.
M. Berryman & P. Woller (2007) RĀPP: Tape-assisted reading to support students’ literacy in Māori in two bilingual schools.. New Zealand Council for Educational Research (NZCER)
A literacy project aimed to raise the reading achievement of Māori students was conducted using Ripene Āwhina ki te Pānui Pukapuka (RĀPP), a tape-assisted reading resource for students learning to read in te reo Māori. SET Research Information for Teachers (2007) No. 2, 19-23.
Russell Bishop & Mere Berryman (2006) Culture Speaks: Cultural relationships and classroom learning (preview). Huia (NZ) Ltd
This book by Russell Bishop and Mere Berryman focuses on what it is like to be a young Māori person in a New Zealand secondary school classroom today. It presents and discusses narratives drawn from the voices of Māori secondary students, their whānau, principals, and teachers.