Teacher PLD

Local curriculum, mātauranga and science

In this recorded webinar Shawn Cooper, Senior Curriculum Lead and science presenter from Home Learning TV, shares his thoughts and insights on developing a local curriculum and what embedding mātauranga Māori into the science classroom could look like.

Tino pai rawa atu! Thank you so much for a thought provoking but also highly practical and personally extremely useful discussion. Truly appreciate the time and thought that has gone into this.

Participant

Shawn has worked across primary, secondary and tertiary settings in Canada and Aotearoa New Zealand and brings knowledge from his own personal and professional journey as a non-Māori wanting to uphold mana ōrite mō te mātauranga Māori.

During the webinar we will share a range of examples and resources to support you in developing a local curriculum that embeds mātauranga Māori.

This was an inspiring webinar. Fantastic presenter. It helped to answer some questions we had been having as a department.

Science teacher

This session will be valuable for both primary and secondary school teachers.

Local curriculum, mātauranga and science

This is an edited recording of the webinar  Local curriculum, mātauranga and science

Rights: The University of Waikato Te Whare Wananga o Waikato

Nga mihi. That was a great session.

Participant

Local curriculum, mātauranga and science – slideshow

This slideshow, from the webinar Local curriculum, mātauranga and science , provides additional support for the video tutorial.

Rights: The University of Waikato Te Whare Wananga o Waikato

You can download the video and slideshow presentation.

Index

Topic

Slideshow number(s)

Video timecode

Introducing the Science Learning Hub

1–2

00:00

Index

3

00:36

Introducing Shawn Cooper

4–5

00:48

Purpose

6

03:30

This is scary. Where do I start?

7–10

04:41

How do I avoid being tokenistic?

11–16

11:44

Connecting to mana whenua

17–19

17:19

Am I being asked to teach religion in my science class ?

20–23

23:27

What if there’s no mātauranga to fit the context?

24–31

33:46

SLH links, keep in touch and thanks

32–35

42:22

Related PLD webinars

Watch our related webinars:

Related content

For an introduction to mātauranga Māori and science, read this  article  and, to discover many more resources, explore our  mātauranga Māori topic. Many of our resources incorporating te reo Māori can be found in this article here .

Project Mātauranga  is a television  that investigates Māori world views and methodologies within the scientific community.

Is knowledge is increasingly valued, but to fully respect it we need to decolonise science – find out more in this  article .

To explore different aspects of research utilising science and mātauranga Māori, have a look at our Pinterest curation of resources here .

Activity idea

Māori knowledge of animals – local contexts encourages ākonga to explore animals of interest to them or of local relevance to their rohe or local area. They are challenged to look beyond the generic features of the animal to consider local mātauranga and/or other local connections. 

Useful links

Watch this  Mātauranga Māori in Education , Education Hub webinar recording with Dr Te Ahukaramū Charles Royal (Marutūahu, Ngāti Raukawa, Ngā Puhi) from 2023.

Evidence supports the teaching of Indigenous knowledge alongside sciences in the classroom, read more in Amanda Black, Jason M. Tylianakis, Teach Indigenous knowledge alongside science. Science  383, 592–594 (2024). DOI: 10.1126/science.adi9606 .

Published: 29 March 2022,Updated: 29 March 2022