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Fiona Cram (Ngāti Pahauwera) reflects on her introduction to the new technology of her childhood—the television set. She intersperses her memories of how this device changed her whānau’s dynamics...

Katja Neef reflects on her personal experiences of living as a mixed-raced Asian migrant in Aotearoa New Zealand and how technology and media can exacerbate racial stigmatisation and structural...

Hannah Christini concludes the section featuring young people’s experiences of changing technology and links this to her choice of becoming a teacher. She highlights that critical literacy and...

Kate Hannah takes umbrage at researchers who decry narrative as not being real research—and, using the stories that the youth writers have shared, highlights the power of storytelling in the...

This article contributes to debates on how the history curriculum should be organised (i.e., thematically, or chronologically). It also contributes to the limited empirical research that employs a...

Nairn, K., Higgins, J., & Sligo, J. (2012). Children of Rogernomics: A neoliberal generation leaves school. Otago University Press. Reviewed by Jennifer Tatebe
Kalantzis, M., & Cope,...

Joce Nuttall (Ed.). (2013). Weaving Te Whāriki: Aotearoa New Zealand’s early childhood curriculum document in theory and practice. 2nd edition. Wellington: NZCER Press. ISBN: 978-1-927151-...


Digital citizenship education (DCE) is a concept that looks to develop learners as competent, critical, and active participants in digitally connected societies. The New Zealand Curriculum (NZC)...
