To learn more, visit the Ngā Kura Māori display, curated by archivist Katherine Pawley and Māori and Pacific Graduate Intern Te Moana Maika, on Level G of the General Library until 17 November.īarrington, J.M. Now held in the General Library Special Collections, these oral histories and a wealth of related primary and secondary sources collected during the project are available for researchers to use. Conducted by researchers from the University of Auckland-based International Research Institute for Māori and Indigenous Education, the project set out to record the recollections of former pupils and teachers. During the 1960s, a series of committees reporting on New Zealand education contended that there should be only one system of state schooling and in 1969 the remaining 105 schools were transferred to the control of local education boards.Ī lack of knowledge about the place of these schools in New Zealand educational history and the realisation that many surviving former pupils and teachers were getting on in years was the inspiration behind the Native Schools Project in the 1990s. By 1955, there were 166 Māori Schools (as they were known from 1947), mostly located in the North Island. MSS & Archives 2008/15, item 74.įrom 1879, the schools were administered by the Department of Education in Wellington, while public schools were managed by local education boards. Despite this, many communities were keen for their children to learn English as a second language and by 1879 there were 57 Native Schools.ĭetail of entry for 15 March 1938, Oromahoe Native School Logbook. Under the Act, it was the responsibility of Māori communities to request a school for their children, form a school committee, supply land for the school and, until 1871, pay for half of the building costs and a quarter of the teacher’s salary. As part of the Government’s policy to assimilate Māori into Pākehā society, instruction was to be conducted entirely in English. The 1867 Native Schools Act established a system of secular village primary schools under the control of the Department of Native Affairs. This photograph of pupils taken at Kaikohe and logbook from nearby Oromahoe Native School are among the archival items from the landmark Native Schools Project on display outside Special Collections to mark the 150th anniversary of the creation of the Native Schools system. Today Kaikohe West School is a rural state primary school but between 18 it was known as Kaikohe Native School and was one of more than 160 Native or Māori Schools in the country.
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