Reference

(2022). Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 52(S1), 116-134.

Degree Grantor

Abstract

The experiences of Māori and Pacific postgraduate students in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) offer insights into how universities, particularly science faculties, currently underserve Māori and Pacific people. This article shares the experiences of 43 current or past postgraduate students at New Zealand universities. Collectively, our stories offer insight into how representation, the white imprint, space invaders/stranger making, and institutional habits, specifically operate to exclude and devalue Māori and Pacific postgraduates in STEM. We provide new understandings of the white imprint (rewarding and incentivising white behaviour), where Māori and Pacific postgraduates were prevented from being their authentic selves. Importantly, this research documents how Māori and Pacific postgraduates experience excess labour because of institutional habits. This research also provides insight into how the science funding system results in superficial and unethical inclusion of Māori and Pacific postgraduates. Our stories provide persuasive evidence that the under-representation of Māori and Pacific in STEM will not be addressed by simply bolstering university enrolments. Instead, our stories highlight the urgent requirement for universities to change the STEM learning environment which continues to be violent and culturally unsafe for Māori and Pacific postgraduates.

Description

DOI

10.1080/03036758.2022.2097710

Related Link

Keywords

3903 Education Systems, 3904 Specialist Studies In Education, 39 Education, Science & Technology, Multidisciplinary Sciences, Science & Technology - Other Topics, Indigenous, higher education, racism, science, Maori, Pacific, MATAURANGA MAORI, SUCCESS, EXPERIENCES

ANZSRC 2020 Field of Research Codes

Collections