Logo
Contact Newsagent Login
Scoop Search
Articles & Opinions Cook Is Fiji FSM Hawaii Kiribati Marshall Is Nauru New Caledonia Niue NZ
Papua New Guinea Samoa Solomon Is Tahiti Timor Leste Tokelau Tonga Tuvalu Vanuatu West Papua

Niue and Cook Island Māori languages threatened

14:07 September 22, 2010Pacific Press Releases 0 comments

Press Release – University of Auckland

Niue and Cook Island Māori languages will disappear from New Zealand within a generation unless urgent action is taken say researchers from The University of Auckland. Niue and Cook Island Māori languages threatened

Niue and Cook Island Māori languages will disappear from New Zealand within a generation unless urgent action is taken say researchers from The University of Auckland.

The research by Faculty of Education Senior Lecturer John McCaffery and Postgraduate research student Judy Taligalu McFall-McCaffery was released today.

“Our research indicates that Pacific Island languages in New Zealand show significant signs of language shift and loss, with several languages, especially Cook Island Māori and Niue language unlikely to survive unless we do something now,” says Mr McCaffery.

“There are no plans at present for Niue or Cook Island bilingual education so prospects for the survival of these indigenous languages within the realm of New Zealand seem very unlikely.”

The research paper, O tatou ō aga’i i fea?/ `Oku tau ō ki fe? Where are we heading?: Pacific languages in Aotearoa/New Zealand, examines the current state of Samoan, Tongan, Niue and the dialects of Cook Island Māori – the four largest Pacific Island languages in New Zealand.

The research draws together statistics, research, public data and community information from New Zealand and the Pacific Islands. This includes information collected during visits to the four Pacific Island nations, 2006 Census data and The Pasifika Languages of Manukau Project – a major sociolinguistic study which examined Samoan, Tongan, Niue and Cook Island dialects in Auckland between 2000 and 2008.

Mr McCaffery says fewer than five percent of the New Zealand-born population can speak Cook Island Māori and less than 11 percent of the Niue population can speak the Niue language. “These figures are lower than New Zealand Māori was before the start of Kohanga Reo and Kura Kaupapa Māori immersion schools,” he says.

Mrs McFall-McCaffery says that even in Samoan and Tongan communities only about 44 percent of the New Zealand-born population can speak their own language and this is predicted to drop rapidly in the next generation.

“This implies that fewer than 25 percent will be able to speak their own languages in the next generation as international research by Joshua Fishman and historical trends of decline of Pacific languages in New Zealand indicate around half of the New Zealand-born Samoan and Tongan parents are likely to raise their children in their first languages,” she says.

“Data from other groups show that as the percentage of the New Zealand-born population increases, the migration of new speakers from the islands has less and less of an impact until, as in the case of the Cooks and Niue, there is virtually no new migration,” says Mrs McFall-McCaffery.

Mr McCaffery says in the islands themselves the effects of decades of New Zealand’s colonial administration have left the languages without status, value or perceived uses.

“This started in the early 1900s when New Zealand, Australian and UK educators working in the Pacific Islands would punish students for speaking their own languages at school.”

“It was reinforced by the colonial rule that only English was allowed to be taught above year four – the result was this left many Pacific peoples feeling their languages were of little value in education and academic learning,” he says.

“This lack of pride, self confidence and the belief that family languages are only for private use and English only must be used for education and public occasions, which emerged in the Pacific, was an attitude carried by migrants who came to New Zealand. It was supported by New Zealand’s monolingual education policies and has subsequently become deeply entrenched in New Zealand society,” he says.

Mr McCaffery says the only research-based strategy that is likely to provide for future survival of all Pacific Island languages is expanding the role of Pacific Island languages in education and into the public domain through bilingual and immersion education.

“Unless this changes soon, the future looks very grim indeed for all Pacific languages,” he says.

More comprehensive research looking at the future of the four Pacific Island languages is needed to back-up the study’s findings – what the research paper does, however, is provide a platform for further research, says Mr McCaffery.

The research paper is published in the Pasifika Special Edition of Alternative – an International Journal of Indigenous Scholarship published by Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga based at The University of Auckland.

The Journal is being launched at a special function celebrating the outcomes of the 2009 Critiquing Pasifika Education conference at AUT University’s Manukau Campus tonight.

ENDS

Content Sourced from scoop.co.nz
Original url

  • Trackback-URL
  • Print This Post Print This Post
  • comments feed for this post

No comments yet.

Write a comment:

 

Search Pacific.scoop.co.nz
Pacifc Islands Forum
Our Facebook page

Pacific Media Centre newsfeed

  • VANUATU: State ties with Indonesia spark protests, arrests
  • PNG: Police assault only woman MP Dame Kidu
  • REGION: Pacific social justice advocate Keith Locke wins Aotearoa human rights award
  • REGION: More ‘bottom up’ initiatives needed for social change, says communicator
  • Fiji’s Constitution Commission: No ‘push over’ but a tough challenge



TWN newsfeed

  • Commercial TV turning us into ‘drones’, MP tells TVNZ7 meeting
  • Breast cancer smartphone app deemed ‘too sexy’
  • Herne Bay residents call for Wellington St on-ramp to re-open ‘immediately’
  • Stephen Fleming’s cricket app crosses international boundaries
  • Success tastes sweet for newcomer Candy Productions


  • Pacific Links

    • About Pacific.Scoop
    • AUT's new Pacific journalism course
    • Brown Pages
    • Knowledge Basket Pacific
    • Pacific Cooperation Foundation
    • Pacific Journalism Review
    • Pacific Media Centre – AUT University
    • Pacific Media Watch
    • Pasifika Foundation
    • University of the South Pacific
  • Pacific Media

    • Asia-Pacific (Al-Jazeera)
    • BBC’s Asia-Pacific
    • Cook Islands News
    • Fiji Daily Post
    • Fiji Sun
    • Fiji Times
    • Fijilive
    • Hawaiian Independent
    • Islands Business
    • Kiribati Independent
    • La Dépêche de Tahiti
    • Les Nouvelles Calédoniennes
    • Matangi Tonga
    • Māori Television
    • New Dawn FM 95.3
    • NewsWire (Whitireia)
    • Niu FM
    • Oceania Flash
    • Pacific Islands Report
    • Pacific Mini Games newspaper
    • Pacnews
    • PasiMA
    • PIMA
    • PINA
    • PMC on YouTube
    • PNG Post-Courier
    • Radio Australia’s Pacific Beat
    • Radio Djiido
    • Radio Fiji
    • Radio NZ International
    • Radio Tarana
    • Radio Waatea
    • Reportage (UTS)
    • Reportage-Enviro
    • Samoa News
    • Samoa Observer
    • Samoalive Newsline
    • Solomon Star
    • Solomon Times
    • Spasifik magazine
    • Sunday Chronicle (PNG)
    • Tagata Pasifika
    • Tahiti Presse
    • Tahiti-Pacifique
    • Te Waha Nui (AUT)
    • The National (PNG)
    • TNews (NZ)
    • Vanuatu Daily Post
    • Xtra media
  • Pasifika Blogs

    • Avaiki Nius
    • Coup Four And A Half
    • Croz Walsh’s Fiji
    • David Robie’s Cafe Pacific
    • Global Voices Online
    • Grubsheet (Graham Davis)
    • Malum Nalu’s PNG
    • Nga Reo Tangata
    • Pacific Eyewitness
    • Pacific Freedom Forum
    • Pacific Media Centre Niusblog
    • Tempo Semanal
    • Whenua Fenua Enua Vanua

  • REGION-WIDE NEWS:

    Pac Scoop VideoPacific Media Centre: YouTube channel's latest videos

    World Press Freedom

    Assaults, repression and self-censorship plague region, says Pacific Media Watch report.


    The King and I

    Pacific Media Watch’s Alex Perrottet interviews the Fiji-based Honorary Correspondent, Neil Underhill, a close friend of the late King of Tonga.

    • Pacific Headlines

      • MPs ‘rubbish’ government reasons for cutting off TVNZ7 funding
      • Vanuatu police arrest protesters in crackdown on demo against Indon ties
      • Governor-General to visit Timor-Leste to mark independence
      • New techniques used to investigate Port Hills rock falls
      • PNG state recovers K52m in corruption probe – more to come
      • Three Houses Down and Spawnbreezie release new track
      • Call For Sustainability In Pacific Education Sector
      • iPredict Weekly Newsletter: ACC Scandal Appears Over
      • Economics of seabed mining don’t add up for Pacific islands
      • Pacific: Parents must send children to school at right age
      • Air Pacific to Relaunch With New Partners Onboard
      • Dawn Raid Signs Up-and-Coming Reggae Sensation
      • Tahiti Boxing Accident a Cruel Reminder of Sports Risks
      • Local Firm Goes Global with European and USA Partnerships
      • PNG police ‘drag’ MP Dame Carol during protest over housing evictions
    • Twitter: pacmedcentre

      • Waitakere Holi thrills with multiracial social media strategy http:///2012/03/waitakere-holi-thrills-with-multiracial-social-media-strategy/ 09:41:30 PM March 13, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Fiji elections best under 1997 constitution, Qarase tells me http:///2012/03/fiji-elections-best-under-1997-constitution-qarase-tells-media/ 07:38:04 PM March 12, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Documentary gives stage to miners’ struggle in Papua http://Pacific.scoop/2012/03/documentary-gives-stage-to-miners-struggle-in-papua/ 08:46:22 AM March 11, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Inform – but also interpret future tren http:///2012/03/inform-but-also-interpret-future-trends-tagaloatele-tells-pacific-journalists/ 06:26:08 AM March 10, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Rolling back the policy 'rollback' over paraiah state Fi http:///2012/03/rolling-back-the-policy-rollback-over-paraiah-state-fiji/ 05:22:34 AM March 10, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Loose Change make their debut at Pasifika Festival http://t.co/N3LQtbUH 12:11:39 AM March 10, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Free media group protests over alleged police http:///2012/03/free-media-group-protests-over-alleged-police-grenade-threat-on-png-reporter/ 11:51:04 PM March 09, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • East Timor's first independence leader hero Amaral dies http://Pacific./2012/03/east-timors-first-independence-leader-hero-amaral-dies/ 07:02:14 AM March 08, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Rollback of the 'Rudd block' on Fiji policy set to begin http://Pa/2012/03/rollback-of-the-rudd-block-on-fiji-policy-set-to-begin/ 09:26:37 PM March 07, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • RAMSI policeman on peacekeeping assignment - and gains a wife http://Pa/2012/03/ramsi-policeman-on-peacekeeping-assignment-and-gains-a-wife/ 10:51:08 AM March 07, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      @pacmedcentre


    MEET THE PMC TEAM

    Introducing some of the faces and projects involved in AUT's Pacific Media Centre. Meet Josephine Latu from Pacific Media Watch, Violet Cho from Irrawaddy magazine, filmmaker Jim Marbrook and TVNZ Tagata Pasifika's John Utanga, director David Robie and others. About Pacific Scoop. – PMC

    Text Links

    Toktok - Feedback

    • Taraivini Wati: This has been one whole sorry ...
    • Tane: Thakur, there are no coup make...
    • Commoner: I think this is exactly how it...
    • Chris Caine: Good summarised story. Tha...
    • Henry Kleinstoll: why doesn't surprises me that?...
    • Thakur Ranjit Singh: Mr Naidu, I never said that me...
    • Thakur Ranjit Singh: Tane, (the coup-makers and sup...
    • Tane: Mr Walsh, there can be nothing...
    • rich: andrew bolt article was not ba...
    • Thakur Ranjit Singh: White media and brown New Zeal...

    Categories

    • American Samoa
    • Asia-Pacific Journalism
    • Columns
    • Cook Is
    • Fiji
    • Frontpage
    • FSM
    • Guam
    • Hawaii
    • Insert Block
    • Kiribati
    • Marshall Is
    • Nauru
    • New Caledonia
    • Niue
    • NZ
    • Opinions
    • Pacific Headlines
    • Pacific Islands Forum
    • Pacific Press Releases
    • Palau
    • Papua New Guinea
    • RMI
    • Samoa
    • Solomon Is
    • Tahiti
    • Timor-Leste
    • Tokelau
    • Tonga
    • Tuvalu
    • Uncategorized
    • Vanuatu
    • West Papua

    Monthly Archives

    • May 2012
    • April 2012
    • March 2012
    • February 2012
    • January 2012
    • December 2011
    • November 2011
    • October 2011
    • September 2011
    • August 2011
    • July 2011
    • June 2011
    • May 2011
    • April 2011
    • March 2011
    • February 2011
    • January 2011
    • December 2010
    • November 2010
    • October 2010
    • September 2010
    • August 2010
    • July 2010
    • June 2010
    • May 2010
    • April 2010
    • March 2010
    • February 2010
    • January 2010
    • December 2009
    • November 2009
    • October 2009
    • September 2009
    • August 2009
    • July 2009
    • June 2009

    Recently on Scoop

    • Martin Doyle Cartoon: Surviving Austerity
    • Julie Webb-Pullman: Jalal Saker's Story
    • Gordon Campbell on Paula Rebstock's welfare reform platform
    • Israel Must be Forced to Implement Prisoner Agreement
    • Struggle over Iran: Israeli Politics Will Not Usher Peace
    • Drones in U.S. Flight Paths: What Could Go Wrong?
    • Investiture Ceremony at New Zealand Embassy, Washington D.C.
    • Manouevred Back Into ANZUS: Subversion of NZ’s Independence
    • A teapot signed by John Key and Banksie up for sale
    • Strongman Mine Doco - Another Disaster at NZ on Air?

    Feeds

    • RSS Posts
    • RSS Comments
    Disclaimer
    All content is the work of the specific authors, journalists and researchers and not statements of opinion from AUT University.


    All editorial and news content is produced under the principles of Creative Commons. Permission to republish with attribution may be obtained from the Pacific Media Centre - pmc@aut.ac.nz

    Pacific.scoop.co.nz © 2012 | Powered by Scoop Media