Greater Support Needed For Aspiring Secondary School Wāhine Māori Leaders
Robust, tailored mentoring programmes, innovative ‘apprenticeship’ models and more professional development opportunities are needed to support wāhine Māori who are or want to be school leaders, a new report has found.
The report, Me aro ki te hā o
Hine-ahu-one | Wāhine Māori in Leadership, is based on
research carried out by Te Wāhanga – the NZ Council for
Educational Research, for PPTA Te Wehengarua.*
Te
Aomihia Taua-Glassie, PPTA Te Wehengarua Māori vice
president and leader of learning -Te Reo Māori at a
Northland high school, says PPTA Te Wehengarua identified
support for wāhine Māori leaders and aspiring leaders as a
key priority.
“We commissioned this research to
help us get an accurate and comprehensive picture of the
experiences of current and aspiring wāhine Maori leaders in
our secondary schools and how they could be better
supported.
“As a wāhine Māori in a formal
leadership position, the research findings resonate so
strongly with me on various levels. While on one hand it’s
reassuring to know that I am not alone in terms of what I
experience as a wāhine Māori leader,
on the other
hand the findings show that our rangatahi are being deprived
of many wonderful potential wāhine Māori leaders because
the support is lacking.”
Lack of support was one
of several barriers to leadership for wāhine Māori
identified in the report. ‘The barriers were multi-layered
and extensive’, the report states. Most commonly perceived
barriers were concerns about work-life
balance,
feeling overworked and lack of confidence.
Other barriers wāhine Māori experienced were not being
able to see people like themselves in leadership, and having
to battle an education system that was not set up to benefit
or value Māori.
Te Aomihia Taua-Glassie says the
report provides clear evidence of what the issues are and
and sets a clear direction for supporting wāhine Māori to
become leaders in secondary schools.
Initiatives it
recommends include strong, bespoke mentoring programmes and
support networks, apprenticeships for aspiring leaders, and
professional development wānanga, courses and
hui.
“I really hope schools, principals, and
organisations such as the Ministry of Education and will
join us and ensure we all do better by our wāhine Māori
leaders and aspiring leaders. More amazing wāhine Māori
leaders in
our secondary schools are the role
models our rangatahi need. I urge people to join us in
making this happen.”
*For the research, more
than 340 wāhine Māori completed a survey and 24
participants were interviewed.
More than 90 percent
of participants work in English-medium secondary schools and
just under 10 percent work in kaupapa Māori secondary
schools.
You can view the report here
https://www.ppta.org.nz/news-and-media/greater-support-needed-for-aspiring-secondary-school-wahine-maori-leaders/