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Information from Te Wānanga o Aoteaora about upcoming events, recent news and notices.

  

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  • Te Ati Awa and Te Wānanga o Aotearoa sign Kawenata

    Te Ati Awa and Te Wānanga o Aotearoa have signed a Kawenata that cements an enduring inter-generational relationship.

  • Making up for lost time

    A stroke and a pending 90th birthday aren’t stopping Bobbie Jarvis from learning about the culture she was denied for much of her life.

  • Tauira works on show

    Toi tauira at Te Wānanga o Aotearoa are as well known for producing excellence in their work as they are for the exhibitions that take place at the end of each academic year. This year is no exception.

  • National recognition for personal challenge

    A personal social experiment started three years ago was recognised nationally at the Māori Language Commission’s 14th Ngā Tohu Reo Māori, National Māori Language Awards on Friday night.

  • Mind your business with Mana Ora

    A new Te Wānanga o Aotearoa programme gives tauira the skills to increase their business nous and their knowledge of kaupapa Māori.

  • Supervision conference gets off to good start

    Love isn’t all you need, but it can go a long way towards improving the way clinical social work theory can successfully work alongside indigenous knowledge.

  • Disruptive by Nature back for second year

    After a successful first year, Disruptive by Nature - the youth-focussed wānanga which challenges kaimahi to think differently – is on again next month.

  • Couple stick together on language journey

    A Pōrirua couple learning te reo Māori together have come a long way in a relatively short time but say they still have a long way to go.

  • Influence of Aunty Ma in new course

    A new programme being offered in 2018 owes its existence to Aunty Ma, who was part of the discussion around its creation and remains the kaitiaki of the programme.

  • Understanding rangahau

    If you want to understand rangahau, forget about research because it’s not the same thing.

  • LeRoy makes a mint

    As a boy, sculptor LeRoy Transfield used to draw soldiers in his school exercise books.

  • Nadya finds her passion

    For Nadya Rapata her passion for creating pākē or traditional Māori raincoats was probably an accident.

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