Re-imagining student success: Integrating strategy and action through an Indigenous lens

Author:

Peterson J. Fiona1ORCID,Ka’ai Tania1ORCID,Smith Valance1ORCID,McPherson Kathryn1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. ISNI: 0000000107057067 Auckland University of Technology

Abstract

Enhancing student success has been increasingly a focus for universities. But the context has changed, with complex challenges including a global pandemic, rapid digital transitions and greater diversity with related inclusion needs. Creative thinking is essential to address what student success could (and arguably should) look like and be. In this article we utilize Appreciative Inquiry to rethink current knowledge and practice. We refer specifically to our context in Aotearoa New Zealand, where data shows that a change in approach is needed particularly for Māori students, Pacific students and other ‘new’ learners. We explore a different way of working and learning – ‘mahitahi’ – and argue that improving outcomes requires more than incremental or tactical shifts in action. We propose a re-imagining of diversity, inclusion and success for sustained transformation. Integrating Indigenous approaches to knowledge into innovative frameworks, adapting future-focused curriculum and creative practice pedagogy in the process, could benefit all students across disciplines.

Publisher

Intellect

Subject

General Arts and Humanities,Communication,Education

Reference103 articles.

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3. Airini, Brown, Deidre, Curtis, Elana, Johnson, Odie, Luatua, Fred, O’Shea, Mona, Rakena, Te Oti, Reynolds, Gillian, Sauni, Pale, Smith, Angie, Su’a-Huirua, To’aiga, Tarawa, Matt and Ulugia-Pua, Meryl (2009), ‘Success for all: Improving Māori and Pasifika student success in degree-level studies: Milestone report 8’, The University of Auckland, 8 December, https://cdn.auckland.ac.nz/assets/education/about/schools/crstie/docs/final-report-success-for-all-Dec09.pdf. Accessed 1 November 2022.

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