Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Ako Aotearoa Southern forum

 Presenting and participating in the Ako Aotearoa Southern Forum today, held at the University of Canterbury Student Union building.

The mihi whakatau brings delegates into the meeting space.

A welcome is then presented by Tai Samaeli, ACE Aotearoa who MCs the event.

Then an official welcome is from Cheryl de Rey Tumu Whakarae Vice Chancellor of the University of Canterbury. Connected the theme of the forum - cultivating thought leadership and excellence in teaching - with the founding premises of the University of Canterbury. To provision education for the region and nation. Education has the influence and power to transform, individuals, whanua, communities and societies. Challenged the need for the many changes being imposed on the current education system. However, change is a fundamental part of education. Especially if changes improve access, and contribute to the greater good of society. Reflected on current developments and reminded us that change and difficulties have always been part of human history. Now, education is much more accessible at all levels. It might feel that the world is in turmoil but this uncertainiy has always existed. Universities are part of the fabric of change. Shared the three Rs of education. Resilience, responsiveness and relevance as being fundamental to higher education. Business as usual no longer sufficient as change accelerates, Change can be a source of optimism and hope. Graduates, to be usefully contributing need to understand the context, to have critical thinking and to be able to communicate complex concepts. 

The first keynote is from Dr. Eruera Prendergast-Tarena, Kaiwhakatere, Tokona Te Raki on 'Beyond 2040'. Following on from Professor Del Rey's presentation, Erurera recommended the need to think like a tūpuna - in a time of great uncertainty to remember the future and re-engaging with hope and possibility. Shared the story of his Ngai Tahu ancestor who survived the Kaiapo massacre, and instituted land claims even in times of great deprivation and disadvantage. It was seven generations later, before the claim came into fruition. Introduced Tokona Te Raki as a social innovation lab to address the complex social problems we are being challenged. At present, many focus on the present, but it is important to look into the future. Introduced the Aotearoa futures barometer - 60% see no other country but concerned about the future and where the country is heading. In developed countries, many (30% thereabouts) feel that their children will have a better life (opposite in the global South). Top concerns in NZ include lost of trust in government and religious institions but education and NGOs still high (60% upwards). Polarisation is seem to be driven by rise of social media. Amongst youth (73%) and Māori see Te Tiriti as important. Shared a 2022 report from Treasury that delivered the warning that the next generation may not be better off than the current generation, Three forces converging in 2040 - climate reality, demographic shifts (older population, strain of superannuation, 40% of labour market entrants will ne Māori, Pasifika or Asian), and technology (elimination of entire categories of work, transform education, employment, human purpose etc. ). Recommended 2019 book on NZ and the future of work. Summarised the implications for education. The old playbook will not work - systems are inherently human and we need to work out a way forward. We need collaboration, partnership, investment and imagination. 

2040 selected as it is the bicentenary of Te Tiriti. It may provide an opportunity to open a window for transformation - for example, communities came together post-quake in Christchurch - and the city has been shifted from being more English than England, to being a city in Aotearoa. The future will that wait, will we be ready?  Shared imaging Aotearoa 2040 - to make a better country for our mokopuna- from control/fragmented to stewardship. Everyone needs to pitch in - young people and Pacifica workers reaching their potential, skilled migrants welcomed and supported, the diapora given reasons to return, knowledge transfer across cultures and generations, and everyone contributing to shared prosperity. Education remains trusted and is a vehicle to contribute towards the transformation. Therefore, to shift to shared futures from rear to hope, division to unity, isolation to cohesion, short term thinking to long term, reactive to proactive, superficial to transformative, and hyper individulism to collective responsibility. Challenged the audience as education leaders to model partnerships in our instituions, prepare tauira for collaborative futures, create spaces for difficult conversations, and champion long-term thinking. Staring with Te Tiriti as our guide, building our shared story, bridging differences and embedding inter- generational stewardship. We have the opportunity to weave the future together. 

After morning tea, I provide an update and details of the 'using Gen AI to support foundation/bridging ākonga' (full report now published), funded by Ako Aotearoa. I summarised the rationale for the project, the project team, the caveats (AI is not benign and must be used carefully so that it does not replace learning but supports learning), findings, recommendations and future projects. 

A discussion session on 'sector collaboration in tertiary education' followed. We discussed collaboration across our organisations and what teaching excellence is.

Then Tākuta Phil Borrell, (University of Canterbury) who was awarded the 2004 Te Whatu Kairangi Kaupapap Māori Award, speaks on Ngākau pono - the importance of authencity in teaching practice. From all the previous speakers, critical thinking was a common theme. Through narratives, went through his main themes informing the importance of being an authentic educator. Good teachers inspire and model possibilities. Importance of bringing practice and theory, usually by bringing experiences into teaching. Allowing your ākonga to know more about you help them empathise and find connections. Used Claire Good's keys to teaching excellence to provide characteristics. Extended and presented examples of being an authentic teacher. We should have fun in teaching using humour and honesty. Share stories and use it as a pedagogical tool. Teachers need to want their ākonga to succeed. 

After lunch, Graeme Smith presents his mahi/work on 'designing intelligence: building tools for the education we need next'. Drew on the presentations in the morning. Partnerships, change, long term thinking, fun, narrative warfare, value/s, possibilities, making better long term decisions, weaving, transformation, systems, humaness ---. Shared experiences building customised AI agents. Encouraged those who are AI-reluctant to use tools that are designed to achieve specific purposes. What needs to be done to build the AI infrastructure - we need to be involved in designing, otherwise it will be done to us. Emerging patterns include braided funding partnerships, values-led, and memory organisations. We need to stop managing delivery and start designing intelligence. Our role is not to preserve the system but to evolve it. Need to build - by adopting and adapting existing tools, think in braided partnerships and imbue values. 

A panel discussion follows with Tai Samaeli chairing and panel members including Josie Ogden Schroeder - CEO of the Kind Foundation, Dr. Cheryl Doig - Kai Ttiro Wāheke / futurist, Dr.Mahmah Timoteo - Māona Vā, and Sandra Fernandes Videira Gordon - Te Wānanga o Aotearoa. 

Introductions follow the panel discussing a few questions.

First question is around how we prepare learners for the future, for jobs and technology that do not now exist. Agility in thinking, doing. Prediction is linear but anticipation envisages many scenarios, some may be implausible, but there is a need to think through these. Creativity, curiosity, communication and critical thinking (4 Cs centre to access digital resources for those who do not have the opportunities). Help learners to build community. Questions then opened up. Where is the future for kids who now face disadvantage. We educators are the ones who need to take up the baton. It only takes one carer to bring a change. Relationships between teachers and students are important. Connection to community also effective. 

A celebration of Ako Aotearoa is led by Jennifer Leahy summarised the many endeavours and initiatives undertaken since 2007, when Ako Aotearoa was set up. The Southern Region has been productive across all spheres :) support the many sectors and objectives of tertiary education 

Followed by the close of the forum. 



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