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Archive
2021
February
March
New survey launched to gather info about Māori experiences of violence in Aotearoa
Te Whāriki Takapou launch second Māori Medium sexuality education programme
Identifying and Responding to Vulnerability and Child Abuse
$4M to reduce homelessness in five locations
Job Vacancies at Kāhui Tū Kaha: Korimako (NGO Co-ordinator)
Job Vacancies at Kindred Family Services
Job Vacancies at Te Whare o Ngā Tūmanako Māori Women’s Refuge
Oranga Tamariki Update for Partners: April 2021
Joint Venture Business Unit Survey
#BreakTheSilence: March Against Sexual Violence in Tāmaki Makaurau
Adapting services during COVID-19: Experiences of DV practitioners
New research finds changes in rates of intimate partner violence in NZ
Increased support for youth impacted by COVID-19
Identifying and Responding to Vulnerability and Child Abuse
Weekly Media Roundup
Workshop: Strangulation in the context of Intimate Partner Violence
Korimako Update - rescheduled
Family violence research project looking for participants
Pacific Competency (Addressing FV through Pacific Cultural Frameworks)
MPHS: Free Family Fun Day
New action plan on forced labour, trafficking and slavery; advocates respond
Responding to the 'Shadow Pandemic' - COVID-19 1 year on: A system under strain
Restoring trust: Ending Officer-Involved Domestic Violence - Virtual Summit
Te Whāriki Takapou launch second Māori Medium sexuality education programme
March 26, 2021 at 1:17 PM
Te Whāriki Takapou has launched their second Māori Medium sexuality education programme ‘Te Ira Tangata’ (Tau 9 & 10). The programme is delivered in te reo Māori and aligns with Te Aho Matua, Te Marautanga and the latest guidelines for Relationship and Sexuality Education in Aotearoa: A guide for teachers, leaders and boards of trustees (Ministry of Education, 2020). It covers topics including puberty, responsibility, body sovereignty, attraction and romance, and respectful relationships.
According to Te Whāriki Takapou:
“Te Ira Tangata (Tau 9 & 10) helps support our Māori students to stay immersed in te reo Māori whilst also learning about sexuality education. Those of you in Māori Medium Education already know how important it is for our Māori students to see their culture, to hear their language, to see their people, and to know their identity is reflected in their learning. For that reason, we gift this programme in the hope that it may provide support to those of you who are carrying the heavy load for the betterment of te reo Māori and our tamariki mokopuna.”
In a media release, Chair of Te Whāriki Takapou, Professor Mera Penehira, argued that the government was still not doing enough to resource and support teachers in Māori Medium schools to deliver healthy relationships and sexuality education:
“… next year is the start of the United Nations International Decade of Indigenous Languages, and it’s time the government delivered on Te Tiriti o Waitangi and the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Māori health organisations like Te Whāriki Takapou work with Māori communities to produce programmes like Te Ira Tangata, but there’s no agreed strategy between the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Education to support healthy relationships and sexuality education in Māori-medium schools. Penehira says it’s time Minister Davis, Associate Minister, Māori Education, worked with the Hon. Minister Hipkins, Minister of Education, to resource and support teachers in Māori-medium schools to teach Te Ira Tangata and similar mātauranga Māori-based programmes for the health and wellbeing of Māori students and the revitalisation of te reo Māori.”
This programme is free and available to download from Te Whāriki Takapou. It has been made with the support of the Ministry of Health.
Click here for more information