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Pūhoro Charitable Trust to Guide Next Phase

Pūhoro
Monday, 20 September, 2021

A hugely successful programme that helps Māori high school students excel in science, technology, engineering and maths is now being overseen by an independent Māori trust, and will strive to become a global exemplar at the interface of science and Indigenous knowledge.

Ko te pae tata, whakamaua, kia tīnā,

Ko te pae tawhiti, whāia, kia tata

 

Secure the horizons that are close to hand

And pursue the more distant horizons so that they may become close

 

A hugely successful programme that helps Māori high school students excel in science, technology, engineering and maths is now being overseen by an independent Māori trust, and will strive to become a global exemplar at the interface of science and Indigenous knowledge.

 

The Pūhoro STEM Academy was set up at Massey University in 2016 to work with local high schools to accelerate Māori student success in STEM subjects, and prepare them for a smooth transition to tertiary study. Six years later, Pūhoro rangatahi are five times more likely than other Māori school leavers to transition from secondary to tertiary education at degree level.

 

In April, Education Minister Kelvin Davis announced a three-year funding package for Pūhoro to grow the number of students from 1,000 to 5000, and expand the programme to include at least two new regions annually. Manahautū and Pūhoro founder Naomi Manu says that this development is years in the making noting that “we will continue to engage rangatahi and whānau in much the same way noting that enhancements to the kaupapa will come as we look to expand and grow”.

 

Today the Pūhoro Charitable Trust, created by, with, and for Māori, assumes responsibility for Pūhoro. The six inaugural Board members are experienced leaders from across the Research Science and Innovation sector and Te Ao Māori. They are:

 

·      Māori Economic Development Advisory Group Chair and Whānau Ora Commissioning Agency Board member Robin Hapi (Co-Chair);

·      Former Rauika Māngai Chair, MBIE Science Board member and Hua Parakore (Māori organic) farmer, Dr Jessica Hutchings (Co-Chair);

·      Ngāi Tahu leader and Te Pūtahitanga o te Waipounamu Chair Sir Mark Solomon;

·      Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga Co-Director and Waikato University Professor of Demography, Professor Tahu Kukutai;

·      Edible Research Limited founder and High Value Nutrition Science Leadership team member Dr Meika Foster, and;

·      Pūhoro STEM Academy Founder and Manahautū/ Chief Executive Naomi Manu.

 

The Trust will deliver an enhanced STEMM kaupapa that recognises the value of mātauranga Māori alongside traditional STEM disciplines. Pūhoro Co-Chair Robin Hapi says the Trust wanted to acknowledge the inclusion of science within Mātauranga Māori, Mātauranga-ā-iwi and Mātauranga-ā-hapū and the role that our knowledge systems bring to illuminate the minds of our rangatahi. “It is a very timely transition with the debates of recent weeks around the place of Mātauranga within our education system. We want Pūhoro to be a global exemplar of what excellence for rangatahi looks like at the interface of science and indigenous knowledge systems”.

 

In mid-August, with the support of Waikato-Tainui Iwi, Pūhoro Charitable Trust signed a new three year agreement with the University of Waikato to support the expansion of the Pūhoro kaupapa across the Waikato region.

ENDS

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