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Saturday, December 9, 2023

Jerry Coyne: A powerful University dean in New Zealand touts merging higher education with indigenous spirituality


This article from New Zealand’s Newsroom site was written by Julie Rowland, the deputy dean of the Faculty of Science at the University of Auckland as well as a geologist and the Director of the Ngā Ara Whetū | Centre for Climate, Biodiversity & Society. In other word, she’s a scientist.

One key to what the article is about is given by its subtitle, ”

The University of Auckland’s Julie Rowland examines the notion that education should be secular and devoid of any form of spirituality

And of course you know that she’ll come down on the “science + spirituality = progress” side. Click below to read, and I’ll give a few excerpts:



Click to read

First she invokes the Treaty of Waitangi, (1840), which guaranteed the indigenous Māori people rights to hold onto their land and villages, as well as granting them the same rights as British citizens, though the country would be governed by England (called “the Crown”). The treaty (called “Te Tiriti”) is now interpreted to mean that indigenous people get roughly half of everything, and can insert their “way of knowing” (Mātauranga Māori, or MM), which includes religion, myths, gods, morality, and some practical knowledge, into everything academic:

Science is a rational pursuit of knowledge, but it does not exist in splendid isolation. If this is painted as the ‘ideal’ science, then it is incomplete. People do science, and people and their culture/s are inseparable.

In Aotearoa/New Zealand our nation’s origins lie with the Treaty of Waitangi. The Treaty is a formal agreement with the third article guaranteeing Māori equal rights and privileges. That means access to education within a system that seeks to fulfil the potential of every individual.

I suspect the heart of the issue is the notion that education should be secular and devoid of any form of spirituality. Proponents of this view would say a karakia (sometimes interpreted as a prayer) to open or close an event, or before guests eat afternoon tea, has no place in education. But in the context of Māori practices and values, and bringing Treaty articles to life, this makes perfect sense. And is absolutely integral.

Integral to what? Apparently not just to teatime prayers, but to all education:

Over the past three decades, Māori values, which are inextricably linked to spirituality, have been taken more seriously by the education sector resulting in a shift in the meaning of a secular education. For example, by 1999, all primary and some specialist (physical education) secondary teachers were required to factor spiritual well-being into their teaching programmes. If you’d been trained to think that spirituality has no part in education, as I did then, this was challenging.

But consider the alternative. If Māori values are parked outside state education, who is education for, and on what terms? Clearly, this scenario disregards every aspect of Te Tiriti o Waitangi and wider indigenous rights.

No, it just makes education secular instead of religious. While it’s okay to teach the small amount of secular knowledge that Māori have garnered (when to harvest berries or shellfish, etc.) into “science,” there is no need to make “spirituality”, including myths and gods that are simply fictional, an integral part of “knowledge”.

And about the Christians, Jews, and Buddhists who are “parked outside education”? Here we arrive at the crux of the matter: people like Rowland think that Māori spirituality MUST be part of education, apparently ignorant of the fact that there are other people participating in education in New Zealand— people who don’t buy the myths of MM.

Remember that the author is a big official at Auckland University, and her final words imply that not only must MM be part of a university education, but is essential to remedy “inequities” (presumably the lower achievement of Māori students than white or Asian students). The idea is that if Māori students don’t see their culture in every part of their college education, it will make them do worse in college. But it will also drag down college education in general by diluting the search for truth—the real benefit of college—with a form of social justice that asserts falsehoods about the universe:

In my view, efforts to acknowledge and understand mātauranga Māori (Māori knowledge) enrich the capacity of students and staff to connect across different world views, which is critical if we are to address the inequities in Aotearoa, let alone global crises like climate change. Acknowledgement and understanding of beliefs leads to richer engagement and the building of a relationship of equals.

Universities are the last in the education line to grapple with the duality that comes with meeting Treaty obligations. There is widespread support for this among academics who see the relevance in multiple ways. Our universities are not at a crossroads choosing the path of the universality of science or a race-based ideology. We are on a dual carriageway and the momentum is building.

Well, fine. Let MM be taught in sociology or anthropology classes as one of several forms of religious belief in New Zealand. But not in science class! Remember that there is a constant fight in NZ to make MM coequal with science in science class. I thought that misguided effort had waned, but according to Rowland it’s the right thing to do.

Unfortunately, Rowland doesn’t specify where her “dual carriageway” is leading. One thing is for sure: teaching MM is not going to do anything about mitigating global warming. Yes, getting more people into science will help science advance, but pushing a quasi-religion as science, just because of a treaty in 1840 which was largely prescientific, is only going to lower the quality of education in New Zealand.

Jerry Coyne is an American biologist known for his work on speciation and his commentary on intelligent design, a prolific scientist and author. This article was first published HERE

7 comments:

DeeM said...

Having a science degree these days don't mean shit!

Alarm bells started ringing when you said she was a Dean at a NZ University. Woke through and through and not a sensible idea to be seen anywhere.
It's people like Julie who need to be moved on to...well honestly, who cares. Just as long as it's out of education where her crazy wacko notions dumb-down our institutions and our graduates.

Anonymous said...

"is only going to lower the quality of education in New Zealand "

it already has, its produced Julie Rowland and many many more - NZs University reputations are at serious risk with this thinking. The 2023 Refreshed NZ School Curriculum suggests its endemic.

2023 Refreshed NZ School Curriculum

Terry Morrissey said...

Julie Rowland
"Skills and Expertise:
Earthquake
Seismics
Convection
Tectonics
Structural Geology
Fluid
Geology
Heat Transfer
Drilling
UAV"
I cannot imagine quite where MM connects with any of the above, or where the TOW is involved in them, but then I am not an academic and only live down here on planet Earth.

Peter said...

Well, well, well, doesn't the University of Auckland get full marks for inclusion and diversity? They have true intellectual's like, Prof Elizabeth Rata, who can see and reason through this decolonisation nonsense for what it is, and then you have the woke and the ignorant, who patently haven't the intellect to understand what Te Tiriti actually says without importing what it supposedly has to provide using wayward reasoning - all, I suppose, to signal and acknowledge some form of misdirected virtue.

Thank you, Jerry, for maintaining an interest in NZ and exposing this patent nonsense for what it is, but you'll have to be careful, there are graduates that are now applying MM to address the likes of global warming. There are Youtube videos on same - not that you'll learn anything other than have to endure a whole load of mindless hocus pocus.

But do keep up the good work. Despite a change of Government and promises to turn our declining education establishments around - that battle is clearly a long way off being won.

Anonymous said...

Maybe Rowland has an invisible Maori chin tattoo. She probably thought the NZ$100,000 grant to the 2 part-Maori academics who claimed that Maori discovered Antarctica 1,000 years ago was money well spent on implementing the oh-so-sacred "Treaty" (which was NOT a real treaty at all since treaties are made between governments of legitimate States). Pre European New Zealand was never a State, but simply a collection of pre-literate stone-aged tribes practising cannibalism, infanticide, slavery and at almost constant war with each other.
The Treaty of Waitangi is NOT the "founding document" of the modern state of New Zealand.

Anonymous said...

The cause of collapsing education standards exposed there.

Gaynor said...

Maori are underachieving because they make up one third of those in the lower SES group. We have in NZ the longest tail of underachievement in the developed world which means that our progressive education has selectively disadvantaged these lower SES students.

When we still had remnants of traditional education from the past we did not have this shockingly long tail of underachievement and there was opportunity for social mobility.for the lower SES student regardless of their background.

Traditional education had methods of teaching and learning that were effective and it concentrated on everyone achieving particularly in the basics.
Progressive education in contrast, the brainchild of US John Dewey a socialist and atheist decreed schooling was the vehicle to build up a socialist state and everyone achieving in the basics was no longer the aim of education.

People like Coyne who wish to write about education in NZ should make themselves more Knowledgeable about the underlying educational philosophies that are producing the failure of low SES students in NZ. Maori have suffered from progressive education as have all low SES students.

The US progressive education has been a very terrible curse to this country and the sooner the better, we return to traditional western education and hence get rid of that infernal tail of underachievement which condemn low SES Maori and other low SES children to a life of welfare, prison or the lowest incomes.

Maori educators like Donna Awatere Huata attempted to promote this return to particularly phonics but unfortunately lost the plot. The Maori academic mentioned is hopelessly confused and will make things very much worse for Maori students as well as all other NZ students.