Despite the high level of performance in international standards by the New Zealand education system, it still experiences high disparities of low and high achievers. It is believed that the Maoris are viewed as reluctant to be enrolled for education as witnessed in the decline in enrollments in the years of 2005 and 2006. Most of the learners leave school before completion and they are perceived to be truant. The Maori people belong to two worlds which they are expected to belong satisfactorily in both of them.
Most of them end up being expelled from school and a number of them are reported to be drug abusers. The Maoris are at times alienated by the education polices that do not in cooperate their cultural differences. Their loss of culture which includes language has at times made them to loss buoyancy and a have sense of individual inadequacy (Maxim institute, 2006). Further loss in culture has led to decreased educational performances, violence, joblessness and criminality. The learning place and the pedagogical approach are of equal importance.
The existence of race based programs has also worsened the situation of educating the Maori community. Due to their poor performance in education, the Maori have been labeled as lacking in the intellectual capacity. Comparison between education system for Maori people and education system for Australian Indigenous people The Maori educational system has some similarities with the education system of the Australian Indigenous people. The education system in Australia is aimed at providing the Aboriginal early learners with education from the ages of three or four.
The main aims of education at this stage are to increase level of knowledge in social, speech, language, cognitive and co curricular activities. The education at this stage is also aimed at inclusion of the Aboriginal culture in to the education system to enable the early learner to identify with the Aboriginal identity, involve the community and family in the education process of the learner and provide knowledge that will enable the early learner to be able to compete at the same level for education opportunities with other mainstream society learners as it aims at addressing the educational disadvantages that the Aboriginal learner faces at the early learning stages (Department of Education, Science and Training, 2003).
At the end of this stage, the learner is ready to join the primary schooling that provides general elementary learning program for persons for 7 years with literacy skills in health, social education, numeric skills and creative skill activities. The learners are ready for the secondary school stage at year eight of learning where the learners undertake a two year general program that is followed by the learner having to do core and the elective courses that are aimed at aimed at suiting the needs and aims of the learner at this stage as it is a specialization stage.
The learners are eligible for vocational education training or higher education program after completion of the 12 year schooling program. However just like the Maori, the Australian indigenous people have faced similar experiences and conditions in the quest for a fair education system. The medium of communication has been the standard Australian English which was hard to comply as they had to learn it as a second language. It is only until recently that the Aboriginal languages was introduced and used in their education process.
The education policies discriminated against hem as the education given to them did not offer the same competitive opportunities like the other mainstream society. The education policies were aimed at excluding and segregating them from mainstream society as the policies was not inclusive in nature (Gordon S, et al, 2002). The education policies were aimed at alienating them and pushing them from having access to land, language, citizenship, job opportunities and culture. The effects trickled and had an impact on the education performances as many of the early learners were discriminated against.
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