Introduction Part A: Kaupapa M?ori Early Childhood Care and Education 1: Working with Deleuzian Theories in a Counter-colonial Project: Re-positioning M?ori language in Early Years Education 2: Policy and Inhibiters of Bicultural/Bilingual Advancement 3: Pedagogies . . . Part B: Indigenising 'Whitestream' Early Childhood Care and Education Practice in Aotearoa 4: Contextual Explorations Introduction Promises, promises . . . Te Tiriti and Te Wh?riki as ethical visions Settler assumption of sovereignty Progressive traditions 'Flaxroots' early childhood education and care services M?ori Pre-schools Chance to be equal Repositioning te Ao M?ori as central to education New right enmeshment with liberal social policies Neo-liberal discursive era References 5: Overviewing Documents Background Guidance from further Ministry of Education documents Shifts seen in recent research M?ori 'Beingness' as a source of potentiality Concluding thoughts 6: A counter-colonial pedagogy of affect in early childhood education in Aotearoa New Zealand Background Methodology Data examples Conclusion Conclusion
Author Jenny Ritchie: Jenny Ruth Ritchie is Associate Professor of Early Childhood Education at Unitec Institute of Technology, New Zealand. Author Mere Skerrett: Mere Skerrett is Senior Lecturer in the School of Teacher Education of the University of Canterbury, New Zealand.
Praise to come.
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