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Education and Life in New Zealand and Australia. Split into groups of 4 I’ll assign each group either New Zealand or Australia For your country, answer: Where is this country located? (Describe in words, and don’t look at a map first!) What do you know about this country?.
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Split into groups of 4 • I’ll assign each group either New Zealand or Australia • For your country, answer: • Where is this country located? (Describe in words, and don’t look at a map first!) • What do you know about this country?
The Flag Debate • Which flag would you want to have? Why?
Education in NZ • Years 1-13, correspond to our K-12 • High school=college. College=university. • High school/college also numbered Level 1, 2, and 3 (like grades 10, 11, and 12).
Graduation and Testing • You don’t really graduate in NZ, you just get to be done when you have enough credits • Some assessments are graded by the Ministry of Education (like our MEAP and MME is), but the credits you earn in school depend on how well you do! • You can get a varying number of credits based on how well you do and what courses you take • So if you’re an overachiever, you can earn your credits, leave high school/college and go to university
Social Studies in NZ • Social science classes required through year 9, but then students have option of taking classes including: • History (mostly special topics) • Geography (like human/environment interaction) • Econ (for business-track people) • Sustainability (science and social science)
A snippet on Australian schools • They have same numbering system as us, K-12 • Government is a federal system, so education has been controlled by the states, but is moving toward more federal control
Mr. Carman does the haka • https://www.dropbox.com/sh/4rlznvph5yf2j5x/slHyha0oOD
There must be a reason I showed that… • There is! • New Zealand is really proud of its Maori culture • Maori culture is infused into NZ culture as a whole
Maori make up about 12% of NZ’s population and retain many land rights • They still lag socioeconomically behind Europeans, called Pakehas • NZ government based on partnership between Maori and Pakeha
Australian Aborigines • Treated much worse than Maori • Why do you think this might be?
Aboriginal people make up <2% of Australia’s population • Very socioeconomically underprivileged • Very recent history of extreme discrimination—massacres in the 1930s and not explicitly able to vote until 1967