Award recognises lifetime immersed in education
Award recognises lifetime immersed in education
It
should come as no surprise that Enoka Murphy was last night
presented one of the highest awards available for tertiary
teaching.
At a ceremony in Wellington, the te reo
Māori and tikanga lecturer from the University of
Waikato’s School of Māori and Pacific Development
received a Sustained Excellence award for teaching in a
kaupapa Māori context at the Ako Aotearoa Tertiary Teaching
Awards.
The award comes just a year after he picked up
a Faculty Teaching Excellence Award from the
University.
Murphy, (Ngāti Manawa, Ngāti Ruapani,
Mātaatua, Tainui, Te Arawa) says winning awards is not what
he’s about “but you get pushed into these
things”.
“The loyal thing to do is to say
yes.”
Murphy’s life has been about education since
the beginning.
His parents were teachers and
“I’ve been teaching since I was 15 or 16. I finished
School C and started teaching”.
He’s taught in
kohanga reo, kura kaupapa Māori and at tertiary level,
along with being involved in theatre, kapa haka and speech
competitions.
His entry to the awards was the first to
be completed entirely in te reo.
Teaching te reo, he
says, is not like teaching any other
subject.
“It’s not just getting up in the morning
and going to work. We’re part of it. Te reo is at the core
of the reclamation of our language, our culture, our rights.
Without language, it is so much more challenging to have a
culture.”
Murphy uses the usual words to describe
good teaching – enthusiasm, passion, belief – but says
that “ultimately, teaching intellectually rocks their
socks off”.
“In a single day you can achieve so
much.”
While Murphy would be happier not being in
the limelight, he recognises the importance of the award and
says it’s not just for him.
“There are excellent
Māori teachers all over the place who won’t go for this
sort of thing unless they are pushed. There are people who
have been doing this for 50 years and they are awesome.
People like Wharehuia Milroy, Timoti Karetu, Huirangi
Waikerepuru and many others. I can jump around and make cool
games and great resources whereas they can just sit in a
chair and speak and every student will hang off their every
word. This is as much an acknowledgement of
them.”
“The whakama, I’ll get over
that.”
The Ako Aotearoa Tertiary Teaching Awards aim
to recognise and encourage excellence in tertiary education,
at a national level.
They provide an opportunity for
teachers to further their careers and share good practice in
teaching. Up to 12 Sustained Excellence Awards of $20,000
each are awarded annually.
Award recognises lifetime
immersed in
education
ends