Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
However, Graeme Ball, the chair of the New Zealand History Teachers' Association, said the new curriculum was "not pushing an agenda or a single narrative". [36] In a discussion on the webpage of the New Zealand Historical Association, historians expressed concerns about the draft as well as acknowledging strengths of the document.
As of July 2022, there were 335 state-integrated schools in New Zealand, of which 236 identify as Roman Catholic. [2] [nb 1] They educate approximately 92,482 students, or 11.2% of New Zealand's student population, [3] making them the second-most common type of school in New Zealand behind non-integrated state schools.
The National Statement on Religious Diversity is a New Zealand statement of intent in the field of religious diversity. It is intended to provide "a framework for the recognition of New Zealand's diverse faith communities and their harmonious interaction with each other, with government and with other groups in society."
Titirangi Rudolf Steiner School [2] (TRSS), is a privately funded school with a unique educational approach known as a Waldorf school, situated in Auckland, New Zealand.. The school offers a co-educational, non-denominational, and independent education for students from birth to eighteen years old (Playgroup to High School), following the pedagogical philosophy of Rudolf Steiner.
Te Whāriki is a bi-cultural curriculum that sets out four broad principles, a set of five strands, and goals for each strand.It does not prescribe specific subject-based lessons, rather it provides a framework for teachers and early childhood staff (kaiako) to encourage and enable children in developing the knowledge, skills, attitudes, learning dispositions to learn how to learn.
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
Religion in New Zealand is diverse. The country has no state religion and freedom of religion has been protected since the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi. [2] While New Zealand was predominantly Christian from the time of European colonisation, New Zealand has, over the last decade, at least, become post-Christian.
New Zealand Journal of History (2008) 42#2 pp 133–153. Studies the impact of Christianity on New Zealand society in the 1920s; Hoverd, William James (2008). "No Longer a Christian Country? – Religious Demographic Change in New Zealand 1966–2006" (PDF). New Zealand Sociology. 23 (1). Royal Society of New Zealand.