
MAORI111-19A (HAM)
Te Reo Māori: Introductory 1
15 Points
Staff
Convenor(s)
Beau Stowers
9634
A.G.24A
Mon, 11am-12pm & Tue, 11am-12pm
beau.stowers@waikato.ac.nz
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Paper Description
This course is intended for students with little or no prior knowledge of the Māori language. Classroom activities are aimed at developing reading, writing, speaking and listening skills, with a particular emphasis on interpersonal communication skills. Priority will be given to the development of oral communication competency and listening skills. The focus will be on basic everyday language like greetings, farewells, family relationships, counting, time, talking about a trip, giving and receiving commands and talking about your likes and dislikes. Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to understand language that has a familiar pattern, recognise new words and be able to interact in a communicative way with predictable exchanges. Learners will also develop an awareness of the language learning process. The medium of delivery favours a bilingual approach and the teaching strategies are based on Māori pedagogical practices and communicative language teaching methodology where possible.
Paper Structure
Weekly Class Schedule
2 x 2 hour lectures
1 x 1 hour tutorial
Core teaching and learning activities for this paper take place during the lecture and tutorial hours. Lectures are used to teach new constructions and vocabulary, to practice using new language, and to develop competence in reading, writing, speaking and listening. Tutorials are used to reinforce and practice what has been learnt in class, to prepare for assessments and to test oral competency, through kōrero ā-waha.
Some additional work and/or materials may be provided through Moodle to support self-directed learning and study outside of the classroom.
Learning Outcomes
Students who successfully complete the course should be able to:
Assessment
Assessment Components
The internal assessment/exam ratio (as stated in the University Calendar) is 100:0. There is no final exam.
Required and Recommended Readings
Required Readings
Recommended Readings
Moorfield, John C. (2001). Te Kākano. Auckland: Longman Paul Ltd.
Biggs, B. (1973). Let's Learn Maaori. A Guide to the Study of the Maaori Language. Wellington: A.H. & A.W. Reed.
Biggs, B. (1981). Complete English - Maaori Dictionary. Auckland University Press; [Wellington, N.Z.]: Oxford University Press, 1981.
Cleave, P., Mataira, K., & Pere, R. (1978). Oxford Māori Picture Dictionary. He Pukapuka Kupuāhua Māori. Wellington [N.Z.]: Oxford University Press.
Māori Language Commission. (1992). Te Matatiki. Wellington: Te Taura Whiri i te Reo.
Ngata, Hōri M. (1993). English - Māori Dictionary. Wellington: Learning Media Ltd.
Reed Books (2001). The Essential Māori Dictionary. Auckland: Reed.
Williams, H.W. (1971). A Dictionary of the Māori Language. Wellington: Govt. Printer.
Additional resources:
Online te reo Māori learning programmes can be found at:
http://www.korero.maori.nz
http://coursecast.its.waikato.ac.nz/CourseCast/Student/Default.aspx
http://elearn.waikato.ac.nz/
Podcasts, videos, and resources - http://www.tewhanake.maori.nz/ these resources can be downloaded using your IPods, MP3 players etc and these resources are free.
Kimikupu Hou – Māori word database - www.nzer.org.nz/search/kimikupu.htm
English to Māori and Māori to English - www.learningmedia.co.nz/nd
Toi te Kupu/Introduction-Database written in Māori that catalogues/describes published Māori language resource material - ww.toitekupu.org.nz/Eindex.html
http://www.tewhanake.maori.nz/
Kia haria te reo Māori ki waho o te karaehe me kaha e koutou te:
Seek many ways to increase and strengthen your knowledge of te reo Māori. Listen to Māori radio, T.V. programmes (Whakaata Māori, Te Karere, Marae), attend wānanga reo.
Mātakitaki pouaka whakaata Māori
Whakarongo ki te reo irirangi Māori
Pānui pukapuka Māori
Kōrerohia te reo Māori, ahakoa ki hea, ā hea rānei
Online Support
This paper is supported by Moodle. Moodle is the eLearning platform of this university that is used to foster student interaction related to learning. This paper (MAOR111) can be accessed by visiting http://elearn.waikato.ac.nz/.
Panoptos for each lecture will also be posted into Moodle.
Workload
Students are encouraged to study every night for at least two hours (where possible). In order to make good progress, it is important to do extra work outside of the classroom as the few hours that you spend in class each week will not be sufficient learning time. Use your extra study time to:
- Complete consolidation tasks not completed in class.
- Research topics, constructions and new words for oral tests and practice for oral test.
- Practise all new sentence constructions learnt during class time.
- Read, learn and revise any material brought up in tutorial classes.
- Revise any work covered in class.
- Learn new words.
The following is a breakdown of the 150 hours recommended for this paper:
Linkages to Other Papers
Restriction(s)
Restricted papers: REOM111