New Zealand children are active users of te reo Māori
New Zealand children are active users of te reo Māori
Auckland, 05 July 2016 – Data from the Growing Up
in New Zealand study indicate that parents and young
children are enthusiastic about including te reo Māori in
developing language skills.
There has been concern for the
poor state of te reo Māori and the critical need to support
strategies to revitalise Māori language. Previous findings
from New Zealand’s contemporary longitudinal study Growing
Up in New Zealand highlighted a growing enthusiasm among
parents and their young children for te reo Māori.
New
information collected from more than 6,100 children
participating in Growing Up in New Zealand reveals that
while fluency in te reo Māori remains low, use of te reo
Māori is common among New Zealand preschool children. When
they were four years old, 28% of children sometimes or often
greeted or farewelled people in te reo Māori. A larger
proportion of children (43%) sometimes or often spoke simple
words in te reo Māori, and 38% sometimes or often
recognised or responded to simple or spoken words in te reo
Māori.
Dr Te Kani Kingi, Māori Expert Advisor for
the Growing Up in New Zealand study, sees these results as
particularly encouraging given that the data reflects te reo
use by all children, Māori and non-Māori, participating in
Growing Up in New Zealand and includes children from
households where te reo Māori is not usually
spoken.
Among children for whom te reo Māori was one of
their spoken languages (around 10% of the participants),
more than half (52%) sometimes or often spoke simple
sentences or phrases in te reo Māori. In addition, almost
three quarters (71%) of these children sometimes or often
recognised and responded to spoken sentences or phrases in
te reo Māori.
“While these new findings do not
suggest that te reo Māori is safe or secure, it does
highlight the fact that significant numbers of Māori and
non-Māori preschool children use te reo Māori, understand
te reo Māori, and recognise or respond to te reo Māori,”
said Dr Kingi. “The implications are that te reo Māori is
used more frequently than previously documented and that it
is part of New Zealand’s unique lexicon - a positive
marker of our national identity.”
Growing Up in New
Zealand will continue to collect detailed information on
language development within this unique and treasured cohort
of children as they get older.
END