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Te Aro School teacher Serah Mehrtens reads ‘At the Marae’ to her class. She says her pupils have not struggled with Māori words in the book.
Caption:Te Aro School teacher Serah Mehrtens reads ‘At the Marae’ to her class. She says her pupils have not struggled with Māori words in the book.Photo credit:RNZ / John Gerritsen
The cover of At the Marae.
A student’s book at Te Kura Kaupapa Maori O Takapu
Students at Pacific Advance Secondary School. Note only use identifying pictures for stories about PASS - only non-identifiying pictures may be reused.
Meremia and Ezra from Te Rangihakahaka Wakanoa and their model of a marae built to rise from floodwaters
Ō Manawatere Regional Park.
Te Kura Kaupapa Māori o Ngāti Kahungunu ki Heretaunga
Te Manaaki Māori Trust, Te Wānanga o Aotearoa, and Pitt Rivers Museum partners. Front from L to R: Vanessa Eparaima (Council Chair, TWOA), Professor Laura Van Broekhoven, (Director, Pitt Rivers Museum), Puamiria Parata-Goodall and Dr Arapata Hakiwai (Te Māori Manaaki Taonga Trustees) Back from L to R: John Pearson, (Acting British High Commissioner to New Zealand), Professor Ngatai Taepa (Te Māori Manaaki Taonga Trustee), Professor Irene Tracey (Vice-Chancellor, Oxford University), Evie O’Brien, (CEO, Te Wānanga o Aotearoa), Natasha Beckman, (Director, British Council New Zealand and the Pacific), Dr Te Aro Moxon, (Oxford University graduate, Senior Lecturer, University of Auckland), Makere Derbyshire (British High Commission - New Zealand), Holly Peterson, (Director Alumni Relations, Oxford University).
Ngā Hapū o Whangārei members turned out to WDC’s Thursday (SUBS June 25) to hear the council decision on whether it would adopt a joint Mana Whakahono a Rohe agreement with the collective (Photo Susan Botting Local Democracy Reporter Northland. Please credit. This photo is for single use only, with Susan’s LDR story content. Please note this in your company’s visuals
Police in Wellington. Generic image
David Seymour on Budget Day 2026
A file photo shows a midwife with a pregnant woman.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon speaks to media in Auckland.