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Tag Archives: Māori Home Front

Te Hau Kāinga Summer Scholarships

Are you a Māori university student? Would you like to a do a research project over summer – and get paid for it?  The Te Hau Kāinga: Māori Home Front project has three summer scholarships available, starting in December. Under supervision, you can develop your own research project in your own home area, whether a historical report, a mōteatea, a video, or such like – something that you can share with your whānau and community.  Or you can undertake a project with one of our partner institutions.  If you’re keen and interested, read the information and get in touch!  If you know of someone who might be interested, please pass this on to them.

2020/2021 Summer Scholarships

Te Hau Kāinga is a University of Otago-based research project supported by the Marsden Fund to investigate Māori experiences within New Zealand during World War Two.   The project is offering three summer scholarships for 2020/2021 for Māori students in their second year or above enrolled at a New Zealand university.  The purpose of the scholarships is to enable a promising student the opportunity to undertake sustained research work over the summer period.

Under the supervision of the project leaders, successful applicants will get to design their own projects and outputs, in English, i roto i te reo Māori rānei, which may include (but not be limited to) a written history, waiata, exhibition, or artwork that can be shared with whānau. Alternatively, Te Hau Kāinga can suggest a suitable research project, perhaps based in one of our partner institutions.  Depending on the nature of the proposed research, successful candidates can be based anywhere within New Zealand.  Summer scholarship recipients will also be involved in public initiatives designed to showcase the project to the wider community, including writing a blog post about their research.

Conditions

  1. Each scholarship has a value of $5,000 to be paid as a stipend in four instalments directly to the student’s nominated bank account (see details of payment dates and conditions below). Extra funding for travel or other expenses will be available if required.
  2. The student is expected to contribute a minimum of 400 hours (or ten weeks) to the project, starting in December.
  3. The approved research project will take place, exclusive of vacation time, between December 2020 and February 2021.
  4. All applications and associated documents must be submitted by 5pm Thursday 1 October 2020. These will include: a brief curriculum vitae (including a statement detailing any research experience to date, and contact details for two academic referees) and an academic transcript.  If you have your own ideas about what you would like to research, please also attach a one-page research plan.
  5. The successful applicant will be a student of New Zealand Māori descent who was studying at 200 level or higher in 2020, and who will be enrolling for study at Otago or another New Zealand university in 2021. Applicants with suitable skills and a background in the humanities and/or the social sciences are eligible. Students considering enrolling in a postgraduate degree, typically an Honours, Masters or PhD programme, are especially welcome to apply.
  6. Summer Scholarships are not to be used to fund student research being undertaken for credit towards a degree/diploma.
  7. The student must not be receiving alternative scholarship support for the same project or any other project over the same timeframe. The student may hold only one Summer Scholarship in total.
  8. Students who currently hold a PhD or Master’s Scholarship are not eligible for a Summer Scholarship. Students with one of these scholarships and who are on a deferral over the summer period are also not eligible for a Summer Scholarship.
  9. The studentship will be paid by the University of Otago Scholarships Office in three instalments of $1,500 with a final $500 payment in March providing a satisfactory report on the project is received no later than 28 February 2021.

 

To discuss the scholarship and possible projects please contact the project leaders: info@maorihomefront.nz.

If you wish to apply, complete and submit this Te Hau Kāinga application form.

Check out the research outputs of previous summer scholarship recipients.

Connor Aston, Ngāti Ruanui (Waikato University) For Kīngi and Country: Waikato During the Second World War.

 

Dylan Thomas, Raukawa, Hauraki (University of Otago) Māori and Hockey: More than a Game.

 

Jordan Quinnell, Ngā Ruahine, Taranaki, Tūwharetoa (Massey University) [Artworks]

https://www.maorihomefront.nz/en/whanau-stories/the-trench-digger/

https://www.maorihomefront.nz/en/whanau-stories/jordans-second-image/

 

For further information on the Te Hau Kāinga project, please see: https://www.maorihomefront.nz/

Project Leaders:       Professor Lachy Paterson,

Te Tumu: School of Māori, Pacific & Indigenous Studies

University of Otago.

Ph: 03-479-8462

 

Associate Professor Angela Wanhalla,

History Programme,

University of Otago.

Ph: 03-479-8462

3 Summer Scholarships for Māori students

The Te Hau Kāinga team are looking for three Māori students (second year or higher in 2019) for some amazing research-based work over the 2019-2020 summer break. There are two main options.  One is to develop a project in your home area to look at how the Second World War affected the whānau and communities there.  The output can be a written report, a mōteatea, a video (or something else) that can be shared with your whānau.  The other is to undertake archival research within an archive, such as the Hocken Collections, or Ngā Taonga Sound and Vision.  If you are curious, or want to discuss an idea, or find out more, contact the project leaders. Click here for more information, or to apply.

Website now live for Te Hau Kāinga project

The website for the Te Hau Kāinga project went live this week.  Te Hau Kāinga is a Marsden-funded research project led by Angela Wanhalla (History) and Lachy Paterson (Te Tumu) investigating the impacts of World War Two on Māori who remained in New Zealand during the conflict, either in their home communities, or working away from home. Designed by local web design company, Myth, the website is fully bilingual.  It features a photo gallery, and a “stories” section, as well as a page where interested people can upload their own whānau stories and photographs.  Check it out – click here.   As stories get added to this site, links to these will be posted to the project’s FaceBook and Twitter pages.  Feel free to follow these to find out more as the project rolls out.

Te Hau Kāinga

Angela Wanhalla (History) and Lachy Paterson (Te Tumu) will be giving a talk on what’s involved in their new Marsden-funded project, Te Hau Kāinga: Histories and Legacies of the Māori Home Front, 1939-1945 this evening.

This will be in the Seminar Room at the Hocken Collections at 5.30pm, 11 September. Yes – this evening.

In particular, they will be explaining how they intend to reach out to whānau to let them know about the project, and to give them the opportunity to share stories of how their kaumātua or tīpuna coped during the war period.   Students who wish to return home and undertake some whānau research over the summer break should come along and learn about the summer scholarships on offer.  Another highlight will be a sneak preview of the project’s website that will be launched very soon.