After English, the two languages most spoken by children in Aotearoa/New Zealand are Māori, the indigenous language of the country, and Samoan, the language of one of New Zealand’s first migrant groups. The ongoing vitality of both these Polynesian languages relies on them being transmitted to new generations of children. This study uses specially commissioned datasets from the 2013 Census to explore the rates of intergenerational transmission of these two languages, and sheds light on how the different circumstances relating to Māori and Samoan affect their rates of intergenerational transmission. The statistics presented also generate a number of potential questions for future investigation
This thesis makes a contribution to the study of language maintenance and shift among New Zealand et...
Current government policy aims to redress the persistent under-participation of Pasifika children in...
The globalization of English is a mixed blessing for many of the worlds' small linguistic groups: it...
After English, the two languages most spoken by children in Aotearoa/New Zealand are Māori, the indi...
New Zealand census data indicates Samoan language use has declined rapidly in the last 20 years, par...
While globally languages are evolving and changing, language shift has been most prevalent in migran...
Samoan language within Aotearoa New Zealand has been labelled as “at risk” of becoming an endangered...
The study explored how culture is understood and practiced in Aoga Amata by teachers, parents and ch...
This thesis examines the dilemmas that the church faces today when dealing with the Samoan and New ...
The official language of Sāmoa is Samoan, but the majority of the population speak English as a seco...
This thesis is a study of bilingual students' literacy abilities and practices in a secondary school...
Within the early childhood sector of New Zealand, Pacific language nests have played a pivotal role ...
New Zealand has some 250,000 people whose families immigrated from the South Pacific islands, making...
Much of the literature paints NZ-born Samoans as a vulnerable group unsure of their identity as ‘rea...
As a result of mass migration from Samoa to neighbouring countries during the 1950s and 1960s, there...
This thesis makes a contribution to the study of language maintenance and shift among New Zealand et...
Current government policy aims to redress the persistent under-participation of Pasifika children in...
The globalization of English is a mixed blessing for many of the worlds' small linguistic groups: it...
After English, the two languages most spoken by children in Aotearoa/New Zealand are Māori, the indi...
New Zealand census data indicates Samoan language use has declined rapidly in the last 20 years, par...
While globally languages are evolving and changing, language shift has been most prevalent in migran...
Samoan language within Aotearoa New Zealand has been labelled as “at risk” of becoming an endangered...
The study explored how culture is understood and practiced in Aoga Amata by teachers, parents and ch...
This thesis examines the dilemmas that the church faces today when dealing with the Samoan and New ...
The official language of Sāmoa is Samoan, but the majority of the population speak English as a seco...
This thesis is a study of bilingual students' literacy abilities and practices in a secondary school...
Within the early childhood sector of New Zealand, Pacific language nests have played a pivotal role ...
New Zealand has some 250,000 people whose families immigrated from the South Pacific islands, making...
Much of the literature paints NZ-born Samoans as a vulnerable group unsure of their identity as ‘rea...
As a result of mass migration from Samoa to neighbouring countries during the 1950s and 1960s, there...
This thesis makes a contribution to the study of language maintenance and shift among New Zealand et...
Current government policy aims to redress the persistent under-participation of Pasifika children in...
The globalization of English is a mixed blessing for many of the worlds' small linguistic groups: it...