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Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Graham Adams: The biggest losers in the mātauranga Māori debate may be Māori students


Graham Adams reports on statements by Professors Robert Nola and Garth Cooper on why they resigned from the Royal Society.

The stoush over whether mātauranga Māori should be taught in the school NCEA science syllabus — sparked by a letter to the Listener by seven emeritus professors last July who asserted that indigenous knowledge isn’t scientific — has reached a stalemate.

The Royal Society Te Apārangi has extricated itself from what would have been a very messy investigation of two of the professors who were Fellows by determining a full disciplinary investigation against them shouldn’t proceed. And the pair under investigation — Professors Garth Cooper and Robert Nola — have subsequently resigned from the society.

One of the seven professors who was also a Fellow of the society — Michael Corballis — has died and the others have largely kept a low public profile.

Nevertheless, a great deal of damage has been done — and principally to the reputation of the Royal Society NZ, whose disciplinary action brought down the wrath of celebrated scientists, including Richard Dawkins, Jerry Coyne and Steven Pinker, on its head.

The society’s unwillingness to defend science has called into question its very purpose for existing, and raised severe doubts locally and internationally about the direction it is taking with its promotion of mātauranga Māori as equal to science.

Dawkins certainly didn’t pull his punches. In a stinging letter sent to the society in December criticising its action (which he tweeted to his 2.9 million followers), he noted…

“the frankly appalling failure of the Royal Society of New Zealand to stand up for science — which is, after all, what your society exists to do… If New Zealand’s Royal Society won’t stand up for true science who will?”

In outlining why he has resigned from the society, Professor Garth Cooper emphasised that point, among others:

“My reasons relate to its loss of understanding of the society’s raison d’être; its suppression of free speech; its failure to properly support science and science education; untoward political focus of management and governance processes; and prolonged defamation of myself and Professors Michael Corballis (now sadly deceased) and Robert Nola, by certain of its authorities.”

The “prolonged defamation” Cooper refers to is the bizarre statement the society posted on its website shortly after the Listener letter was published:

“The recent suggestion by a group of University of Auckland academics that mātauranga Māori is not a valid truth is utterly rejected by Royal Society Te Apārangi. The society strongly upholds the value of mātauranga Māori and rejects the narrow and outmoded definition of science outlined in the Listener letter to the Editor. It deeply regrets the harm such a misguided view can cause.”

The statement was left on its website for five months — and was not removed for several weeks after it had begun its disciplinary investigation into the two professors, as if it could then somehow still claim to be an impartial judge in their case.

The society’s statement clearly misrepresented the professors’ views — not least because the professors never said mātauranga Māori wasn’t a “valid truth”. In fact, they went out of their way to emphasise it was valuable in certain areas, writing: “Indigenous knowledge is critical for the preservation and perpetuation of culture and local practices, and plays key roles in management and policy.”

In outlining his reasons for resigning from the society, Professor Nola has pointed out:

“No evidence was ever given concerning the harm we allegedly caused. But this is also part of a view in which any harm caused by free speech, and even the extent of academic freedom, ought to lead to the curtailment of such freedoms. I regard this as an unwelcome development.”

With regard to the professors’ claim that, “Indigenous knowledge … is not science”, Nola points out that this is...

“a contestable claim which is worthy of debate, but none was given through the Royal Society. Its response was to shut down dogmatically such discussion.

Clearly, we had no support in advocating views about science and knowledge which were not sanctioned by the society — especially in the case where indigenous ‘knowledge’ systems are given a privileged protection immune from criticism. We are simply not permitted to say that indigenous knowledge is not a science (even though many scholars working in the field of mātauranga Māori say that it is not!).

Even if one might disagree with these views, at least support of the doctrines of academic freedom and free speech would not lead one to reject these views out of hand. In sum, I regard the website note as obnoxious, as did many who commented to me about it.”

Whether or not belonging to the Royal Society will now have the prestige it may have once had, the biggest losers in the push for mātauranga Māori in schools (and throughout the tertiary education and research sector), may well be Maori students themselves.

Certainly this is Professor Cooper’s assessment, who says:

“I signed the letter to make clear, in a public forum, my opposition and deep concern about processes now under way in New Zealand that are evidently undermining literacy, numeracy, and science literacy, particularly amongst Māori children.

I have Māori heritage. For most children, a good education is often their best hope of improving their trajectory in life and I was raised in that belief.

I did not experience anti-Māori bias. Real bias stems from the view that Māori can’t do things or participate fully in society because they’re Māori.

Unfortunately, the partial substitution of mātauranga Māori for international-format science education, perhaps unintendedly, is implying that limitation.”

Certainly, very few researchers or academics could be better qualified to make such an assessment given Cooper’s extensive involvement in Māori health initiatives:

”Much of my career has been focussed on kaupapa (Māori agenda) research and teaching aimed at improving Māori health care delivery and Māori science education, on marae and in hospital and medical school/university settings.

That focus has been literal — personally designing, writing, teaching, and executing novel and successful programmes in both Māori health and education. As part of my commitment to these objectives, I served on the national Health Research Council, including six years’ service on Te Komiti Māori with further years advising on Māori health development.

While treating many Māori in diabetes clinics, I turned my focus to kaupapa diabetes research, since this disease is a leading cause of disability and death amongst Māori. Inter alia, this work entailed visiting marae throughout the country to inform and seek endorsement of iwi.

With much dismay, I have been witnessing a recent profound undermining of the meaning of science in New Zealand, now under way with the introduction of mātauranga Māori education as having parity with sciences including mathematics, chemistry, biology, and physics.

Mātauranga Māori should be taught, as we stated in our letter, but not as part of the national science curriculum.

The inherent bias against students in suggesting that rather than a sound grounding in mathematics, biology, chemistry and physics, there is to be parity with non-scientific systems such as mātauranga Māori, will be massively counterproductive for all students, but especially biased against Māori.

Māori are good students when they are afforded the proper opportunity to learn, and I have specific knowledge and experience of this based on my past formal roles in Māori education.

Their right to unbiased access to optimal education, if they wish, should be protected vigorously.”

As it happens, the professors’ main motivation in writing the Listener letter was not to point out that mātauranga Māori is unscientific, but to object to the NCEA working party’s stance that science was an integral part of colonial oppression in New Zealand.

As Michael Corballis told Mihingarangi Forbes on the The Hui last August:

”Our main purpose was not to explain mātauranga Māori. Our main purpose was to complain about the fact that kids are being taught that science is colonising and evil.”

Nola put it this way:

“The main critical target in the letter was a claim in a government NCEA working party report that science itself has been used to support Eurocentric views and colonisation (as opposed to people as agents of colonisation who might also use science). We strongly objected to this view.”

The importance of that point has largely been lost in the storm that followed the Listener letter but it’s easy to imagine how damaging and counterproductive such a view would be to Māori students who wish to study science.

Graham Adams is a freelance editor, journalist and columnist. He lives on Auckland’s North Shore. 


3 comments:

MC said...

Questioning conventional wisdom is entirely appropriate, on the proviso that such enquiry is sane, reasonable and well thought out. Any person exercising such tenets of logical extension might well recoil in horror at the degree of primitive nonsense on display with "mataurangi". Substituting shamanism for science might well win one more taxpayer funded recompense, but is entirely laughable from a practically oriented weltanschauung. Such idiocy sadly belongs in our current tertiary educational institutions, for there it should stay, alongside magic, religion, witchcraft etc. What is totally distressing to me is that such lunatic bastardization of reason is being promulgated by our 'vacuous teenager' at the helm, and her equally dippy cadre of morons who gleefully group - think themselves into a state of smug conceit, dogmatism and nepotism. It's as if sanity has reached he top of the curve and is now flattening off, unable to progress for want of more intelligence. The new global religion of 'Wokeism' is being preached by most every idiot quasi - journalist out there. "Balanced" reporting is a foreign concept. At the behest of the local witch doctor, MS Freshwater throws her erudite professors under the bus. Complete and absolute nonsense. Tragic.

PeterB said...

One day in 1770, Commander Green, Cook's astronomer and Tupaia were on the deck of the Endeavour sailing away from Tahiti. Green saw a comet in the sky, and Tupaia thought it was a portent of a massacre that was going to take place at Raiatea, his island home which he had been driven from as a boy as a result of inter tribal warfare. Tupaia was a priest who spent half his time on board praying. Green was a scientist, Tupaia an astrologer, a dubious pseudo science at best. Later the crew found themselves along the east coast of Australia; supplies of food being very low they started eating turtles, which they found more than edible. Tupaia wouldn't touch them because from where he came from they were sacred. Surely, if you're starving you'll eat sacred cows?

Robert Arthur said...

Just some of the points made by Graham Adams above have received mention in the msm and then only fleetingly. In the shadow of PIJFunding certainly will not now.There can be few periods in NZ history when matters of great moment have not been reasonably and objectively covered by the msm accessed by the majority public. Despite unlimited communication methods the general public is less objectively informed than decades ago.Editorials are timid in the extreme. Whilst along with so many maori words a precise definition is elusive and variable, the great majority would have no idea what matauranga means.This despite its associated controversy repeated in many areas (ie kauri die back)

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