E kore au e ngaro,
He kākano I ruia
Mai I Rangiātea
I will never be lost,
For I am a seed
Sown in the heavens
For
all of us, as individuals, groups and nation, our culture gives us strength and
direction, and as a teaching team and a learning centre it is important to
acknowledge and celebrate this fact within our collective way of being and our
curriculum at Mairtown Kindergarten.
Nicki Lisa Cole (2019), explains culture consists of the values, beliefs, systems of language, communication, and practices that people share in common and that can be used to define them as a collective. Culture also includes the material objects that are common to that group or society.
The
tikanga which have always been the central pou (supporting pillars) of our
cultural expression are Manaakitanga and Whanaungatanga. The Māori dictionary
defines these tikanga as…
Whanaungatanga
- relationship, kinship, sense of family
connection - a relationship through shared experiences and working together
which provides people with a sense of belonging.
Manaakitanga - hospitality, kindness, generosity, support - the process of showing respect, generosity and care for others.
For us, all learning begins from a place of nurturing, relationship and belonging; and recognising all tamariki bring with them their own whānau culture, knowledge and gifts which they then build on within their learning environment. We seek to promote an excitement for learning within our learning community and see play as the essential means by which tamariki explore and develop their skills, strategies and existing knowledge (Mairtown Philosophy).
We also
love to celebrate special individual milestones, birthdays with our special
birthday ritual, and the time of leaving us to take the next step in learning
by adorning the tamaiti with our beautiful Kahupukuwhiwhi. These Mairtown
kindergarten rituals recognising the importance of these landmark events for
each tamaiti, and their own important place within our kindergarten whānau.
We
love to recognise the mana of Te Tiriti ō Waitangi in our rituals, routines and
curriculum provision. This document preserves the rights of Māori as tangata
whenua of Aotearoa, and also offers those who have come to settle here since
the signing of te Tiriti ō Waitangi, the ability to make this their home too
and a framework within which to live respectfully.
As
we express in our centre pepeha, we all come from ngā hau e whā (the four
winds) to gather and learn together in the beautiful spaces we share; the
kindergarten itself and our wonderful Mair Park, home of our Nature programme. Our
pepeha has become a way for us to come together and understand the context we
are each part of here – our geographical features, the peoples who have come
before us and ourselves as a group. This is an understanding which forms the
basis of our connections at kindergarten, and we are so proud to see the way
our tamariki show their ownership of our pepeha, standing together to sing the
words and do the actions which depict what they are describing.
As
a teaching team we are always learning, yet always have so much still to learn
every day. We are lucky to be on this special journey with so many wonderful
people around us at Mairtown kindergarten, and we love the rich cultural
knowledge that each tamaiti and whānau brings with them to strengthen our
shared culture. Learning and growing together will surely support our tamariki to
grow up strong in identity, language and culture, able to engage with new
contexts, opportunities and challenges with optimism and resourcefulness (Te
Whāriki, 2017).
Tangata ako ana i
To kāinga, te tūranga ki
Te marae, tau ana
A person nurtured in the
community contributes
strongly to society
Ma te wā
Anne
No comments:
Post a Comment