Publications
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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.
R. Bishop, & M. Berryman & L. Cavanagh & L. Teddy & S. Clapham & R. Lamont & A. Jeffries & S. Copas & A. Siope & D. Jaram (2008) Te Kotahitanga: Towards sustainability and replicability in 2006 and 2007.. The University of Waikato
Bishop, R., Berryman, M., Cavanagh, T., Teddy, L., Clapham, S., Lamont, R., Jeffries, A., Copas, S., Siope, A., & Jaram, D. (2008). Te Kotahitanga: Towards sustainability and replicability in 2006 and 2007: Report to the Ministry of Education. Hamilton: University of Waikato Te Kotahitanga Research and Professional Development Team. Contact your library or The University of Waikato for advice on obtaining this article.
R. Bishop & M. Berryman & L. Teddy & T. Cavanagh (2008) A culturally responsive pedagogy of relations: Effective teaching for Māori students. In A. St.George, S. Brown and J. O'Neill (Eds.), Facing the big questions in teaching: Purpose, power and learning (pp. 165-172).. Cengage Learning
Bishop, R., Berryman, M., Cavanagh, T., & Teddy, L. (2008). A culturally responsive pedagogy of relations: Effective teaching for Māori students. In A. St.George, S. Brown and J. O'Neill (Eds.), Facing the big questions in teaching: Purpose, power and learning (pp. 165-172). Melbourne: Cengage Learning. Contact you local library or the University of Waikato for advice on obtaining this publication.
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.