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Āku Tangi Kōrero, Āku Tangi Tikanga e Māori Best Practice

Tracks
Ian McLachlan Room East
Tuesday, October 25, 2022
1:05 PM - 1:20 PM

Overview

Terri Cassidy and Moe Milne, Te Rau Ora


Speaker

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Mrs Terri Cassidy
Kaiwhakaoho Mauri - Senior Programme Manager
Te Rau Ora

Āku Tangi Kōrero, Āku Tangi Tikanga e Māori Best Practice

Abstract

The principles of our tikanga, our ancient practices as Māori and our unique ways of knowing and being, create a solid foundation for successful outcomes for our people. Māori practice as ‘best’ practice is at the heart of Āku Tangi Kōrero, Āku Tangi Tikanga e. Taking place over three days, this wānanga is a platform for Māori practitioners working in Māori health and wellbeing to come together, reclaim, share and celebrate indigenous knowledge and practice. A key component of the wānanga is the implementation of a reflective tool called ARI, which is designed to conscientise deliberate, effective Māori practice. ARI asks us to reflect on how we can be accountable, responsible and inspirational to support those we work with to achieve wellbeing. This presentation provides insights of the Āku Tangi Kōrero, Āku Tangi Tikanga e wānanga held in person and online, sharing some of our learnings and experiences of participants. We will introduce ARI as an indigenous tool that promotes accountable, responsible, and inspirational practice within the Māori health sector.

Biography

Terri Cassidy Ngāti Maniapoto Terri works for Te Rau Ora, a National Māori Health Organisation in Aotearoa, New Zealand. Over many years she has worked with Māori communities across the country to contribute to capability and capacity building pathways. As co-founder of Te Ngaru Learning Systems, her work with Paraire Huata influenced the revival of traditional tikanga based Māori frameworks of practice.
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Mrs Moe Milne
Kaumatua
Te Rau Ora

Āku Tangi Kōrero, Āku Tangi Tikanga e Māori Best Practice

Abstract

The principles of our tikanga, our ancient practices as Māori and our unique ways of knowing and being, create a solid foundation for successful outcomes for our people. Māori practice as ‘best’ practice is at the heart of Āku Tangi Kōrero, Āku Tangi Tikanga e. Taking place over three days, this wānanga is a platform for Māori practitioners working in Māori health and wellbeing to come together, reclaim, share and celebrate indigenous knowledge and practice. A key component of the wānanga is the implementation of a reflective tool called ARI, which is designed to conscientise deliberate, effective Māori practice. ARI asks us to reflect on how we can be accountable, responsible and inspirational to support those we work with to achieve wellbeing. This presentation provides insights of the Āku Tangi Kōrero, Āku Tangi Tikanga e wānanga held in person and online, sharing some of our learnings and experiences of participants. We will introduce ARI as an indigenous tool that promotes accountable, responsible, and inspirational practice within the Māori health sector.

Biography

Moe Milne Ngāti Hine, Ngāpuhi Consultant, Te Rau Ora Moe has a wealth of knowledge and experience across many sectors. She is a recognised leader and Kaupapa champion for Māori in hauora, mental health, addiction, te reo and much more. Moe finds ways to influence how the health system delivers on Te Tiriti o Waitangi obligations to Māori. She is a long-time advocate for tangata Māori and their families to live well nurtured in their reo, to be Māori, to be rangatira and to be educated.
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