Otago academic wins supreme teaching excellence award
- Prime Minister’s Supreme Award won by Otago staff for fourth year in a row -
The Prime Minister’s Supreme Award for tertiary teaching excellence has been won by an academic from the University of
Otago for the fourth year running.
The Award was last night presented to Associate Professor Suzanne Pitama, Director of the Māori/Indigenous Health
Institute (MIHI) at the University of Otago, Christchurch. She receives $10,000 through the Supreme Award.
The Supreme Award is considered the ultimate prize of the national Tertiary Teaching Excellence Awards, held annually at
Parliament. As the 2015 recipient, the Prime Minister’s Supreme Award recognises Associate Professor Pitama’s unstinting
commitment to tertiary learners and the broader community spanning a 14-year teaching career.
The Awards celebrate New Zealand’s finest tertiary teachers – as recognised by their organisations, colleagues, learners
and broader communities. A total of twelve awards were presented tonight for Sustained Excellence in Tertiary Teaching –
under General and Kaupapa Māori categories. Each awardee receives $20,000.
Associate Professor Pitama was one of the Kaupapa Māori winners while her Otago colleagues Dr Roslyn Kemp (Microbiology
and Immunology) and Professor Rachel Spronken-Smith (Dean, Graduate Research School) received awards in the General
category.
University of Otago Vice-Chancellor Professor Harlene Hayne says she is delighted that Associate Professor Pitama has
joined the distinguished roll of Otago staff recognised through the Supreme Award.
“On behalf of the entire University community, I warmly congratulate Suzanne, along with Roslyn and Rachel, on their
outstanding achievements. We are very proud of them all.
“The University’s ongoing success in these awards reflects Otago’s commitment to high quality teaching. Excellent,
inspiring teachers such as these three are central to ensuring that we remain at the forefront of New Zealand
universities in teaching, and continue to be held in high regard internationally.”
Suzanne Pitama—an innovator and a leader
Associate Professor Suzanne Pitama’s teaching career is distinguished by innovation and leadership – working tirelessly
towards improving health in Māori communities with a commitment to redressing the inequity between Māori and non-Māori
on issues relating to illness. Her teaching is student-centred; striving to educate medical students to work alongside
Māori patients, whānau and communities in ways that support best clinical practice and reduce Māori health inequities.
An international colleague describes her teaching programme as “the most comprehensive Indigenous health curricula (in
medicine) in Australia and New Zealand.” She initiated Hauora Māori Day in 2010 as a student-led initiative where 100
fifth-year medical students and 35 clinical staff provided free health screenings to the Māori community. The event was
so successful it has been undertaken annually since.
Seeing a need to increase cultural competency amongst teachers and learners across medical schools, Associate Professor
Pitama has written and filmed instructional videos for Māori and non-Māori clinicians and students.
In 2010, she developed two Māori models of health, The Hui Process and The Meihana Model; both of which directly connect
Te Ao Māori (the Māori World) with clinical practice. The Hui Process teaches students how to engage with a Māori
patient and their whānau, interweaving clinical practice throughout each stage. The Meihana Model helps students to
complete the Kaupapa component of the clinical interaction/assessment so they achieve both clinical and cultural
integration in their practice.
These models have now been integrated into the Māori health curriculum across the University of Otago’s three clinical
schools, medical schools at other tertiary institutions, government departments and a broader range of health providers.
Otago’s string of Supreme Award successes
As well as tonight’s success for Associate Pitama making it the fourth year in a row that Otago academics have won the
Prime Minister’s Supreme Award, it also marks the sixth time in the past 13 years that the honour has gone to a teacher
from this University.
Last year, Dr Karyn Paringatai (Te Tumu — School of Māori, Pacific and Indigenous Studies) received the honour, and in
2013 it went to Associate Professor Gordon Sanderson (Ophthalmology) and Associate Professor Rhiannon Braund (Pharmacy)
in 2012. Associate Professor Selene Mize (Law) won in 2009 and Associate Professor Peter Schwartz (Pathology) won in
2003. No other tertiary institution has achieved this level of success.
ends