Cultural Perspectives Papers (2022)
All of our undergraduate qualifications offer a cultural perspectives element to give students skills, confidence and capabilities in understanding their own and other cultures, in order to work and contribute effectively within increasingly diverse local and global contexts. This cultural perspectives element may be a single paper, or it may be a collection of papers. Completing this cultural perspectives element is compulsory.
The cultural perspectives papers are listed here by Division. However, the appropriate paper or papers will depend on which qualification and subjects you are studying. For course planning information, please see a Student Advisor in your Division of study.
On this page
- Division of Arts, Law, Psychology and Social Sciences
- Division of Education
- Division of Health, Engineering, Computing and Science
- Division of Management
- Faculty of Māori and Indigenous Studies
- 100 Level
- 200 Level
- 300 Level
Division of Arts, Law, Psychology and Social Sciences
If you are taking a Bachelor of Arts, a Bachelor of Music or a Bachelor of Social Sciences you should include any one of: ANTHY102, INTLC101, ANTHY201, ANTHY202, DSIGN252, EDUCA200, ENGLI200, FRNCH225, GEOGY219, HISTY225, INTLC221, INTLC222, LEGAL211, LINGS203 or any MAORI or PACIS coded paper. Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Social Sciences students may also select ANTHY101 to meet this requirement.
If you are taking a Bachelor of Environmental Planning you should include MAORI102 and GEOGY219.
If you are taking a Bachelor of Laws or a Bachelor of Laws with Honours your cultural perspectives requirements are included in the papers required for the programme, as specified on the Law subject page.
If you are taking a Bachelor of Social Work you should include MAORI150 or MAORI222.
Division of Education
If you taking a Bachelor of Education or a Bachelor of Teaching you will need to include TEACH101 or TEEDU201.
If you are taking a Bachelor of Social Sciences you will need to include EDUCA200.
Division of Health, Engineering, Computing and Science
If you are taking a Bachelor of Computing and Mathematical Sciences with Honours you should include CSMAX270.
If you are taking a Bachelor of Design you should include DSIGN252.
If you are taking a Bachelor of Engineering with Honours you should include ENGEN370.
If you are taking a Bachelor of Health you can meet this requirement through any MAORI paper in your programme.
If you are taking a Bachelor of Health, Sport and Human Performance you should include MAORI204.
If you are taking a Bachelor of Science or a Bachelor of Science (Technology) you should include CSMAX270 (if studying through the School of Computing and Mathematical Sciences) OR SCIEN305 (if studying through the School of Science).
Division of Management
If you are taking a Bachelor of Business or a Bachelor of Management Studies with Honours you should include MNMGT202.
If you are taking a Bachelor of Business Analysis or a Bachelor of Communication Studies you may include any one of the papers listed below.
Faculty of Māori and Indigenous Studies
If you are taking a Bachelor of Arts or a Bachelor of Social Sciences you can meet this requirement through any MAORI or PACIS paper in your programme.
100 Level
Code Paper Title Points Occurrence / Location ANTHY101 Exploring Cultures: Introduction to Anthropology 15.0 22B (Hamilton) An introduction to sociocultural anthropology and the comparative study of human societies and cultures, in all their various forms. An examination of social, political and economic organisation, beliefs, values and ideologies. ANTHY102 Exploring Cultures: Aotearoa and the Pacific 15.0 22A (Hamilton) Social and cultural change in Aotearoa-New Zealand and the Pacific Islands, with special emphasis on national identities, regional relations and global forces. INTLC101 International Languages and Cultures 15.0 22B (Hamilton) & 22G (Online) This paper introduces students to major world cultures and their languages in a comparative context. Students will gain a critical understanding of culture and diversity through examining the languages and cultures of China, France, Japan, Spain and Latin America. MAORI100 Kōkiri: Academic Skills for Indigenous Studies 15.0 22A (Hamilton) & 22A (Online) This paper introduces academic skills that are directly useful for the rest of your university studies but will also provide a foundation for critical thinking and clear communication beyond the university. We focus on academic conventions in relation to Indigenous Studies: understanding the Indigenous and colonial contexts of tert... MAORI101 Introduction to Conversational Māori for Absolute Beginners 15.0 22A (Hamilton), 22A (Tauranga) & 22B (Hamilton) For absolute beginner students, this introductory paper to conversational Maori pays particular attention to pronunciation, greetings, and forms of language associated with certain cultural functions, such as mihimihi, as well as tasks such as thanking people, farewelling, communicating personal information, and naming everyday obj... MAORI102 He Hīnatore ki te Ao Māori: Introducing the Māori World 15.0 22A (Hamilton), 22A (Online), 22B (Hamilton), 22B (Online) & 22G (Online) An introduction to the Maori world view, social organisation, cultural concepts, including Maori astronomy, and their relevance in a contemporary society. MAORI103 Introduction to Māori, Pacific and Indigenous Studies 15.0 22B (Hamilton) & 22B (Online) This course examines Maori, Pacific and Indigenous peoples' philosophies and relationships with land, language, culture, resources, development and political frameworks within settler-colonial states and Pacific nations and others. MAORI104 Te Hā o te Reo: Emergence of the Language 15.0 No occurrences This paper further reinforces students' acquisition of introductory language components taught in MAORI111 and MAORI112, expanding on the fundamentals of Mihimihi, Pepeha and Whakapapa, whilst introducing students to Kingitanga. MAORI111 Te Reo Māori: Introductory 1 15.0 22A (Hamilton), 22X (Hamilton) & 22X (Tauranga) An introductory paper for students with little or no knowledge of the Maori language which provides basic everyday language such as: greetings, farewells, focusing on family relationships, numbers, time, shopping, talking about a trip and commands. MAORI112 Te Reo Māori: Introductory 2 15.0 22B (Hamilton), 22X (Hamilton) & 22X (Tauranga) This paper extends the language and communication skills developed in MAORI111 to include the language of mealtimes, instructions/commands, expression/idioms, describing clothing and parts of the body, and a variety of Marae protocol. MAORI114 Te Hā o te Reo: Emergence of the Language 15.0 22X (Online) This paper further reinforces students' acquisition of introductory language components taught in MAORI111 and MAORI112, expanding on the fundamentals of Mihimihi, Pepeha and Whakapapa, whilst introducing students to Kingitanga. MAORI150 Te Tiriti o Waitangi: An Introduction to the Treaty of Waitangi 15.0 22A (Hamilton), 22A (Tauranga) & 22B (Hamilton) This paper seeks to provide a sound understanding of Te Tiriti o Waitangi. It reviews historical and contemporary interpretations and takes into account the interplay of contextual issues of the time. MAORI151 Te Raranga Kete: Introduction to Māori Fibre Arts 15.0 No occurrences An introduction to theoretical and practical components of weaving kete. Students learn to weave kete and critically examine traditional techniques, along with modern day applications. MAORI157 Ngā Mahi a Rehia: An Introduction to Kapa Haka 15.0 22B (Hamilton) An introduction to the theoretical and practical components of kapa haka as a means of communication and cultural expression in the Maori world. PACIS100 Introduction to Pacific Histories, Languages and Cultures 15.0 22A (Hamilton) This paper introduces students to foundational elements of Pacific Studies, including various histories, languages and cultures and their importance to contemporary societies, surveying a number of Pacific Nations. TEACH101 Ko te Reo me ngā Tikanga o ngā kura 15.0 22X (Hamilton), 22X (Online) & 22X (Tauranga) This paper introduces students to the skills, attitudes and values required of a teacher in Aotearoa New Zealand. It explores professional and ethical requirements for teachers and commitment to the Treaty of Waitangi. 200 Level
Code Paper Title Points Occurrence / Location ANTHY201 Patriots, Racists, and Foreigners: Ethnicity and Identity in Global Perspective 15.0 22A (Hamilton) This paper focuses on ethnicity and related categories of division such as "race" and nation. It explores how these concepts link to identity in different cultures and societies. CSMAX270 Cultural Perspectives for Computing and Mathematical Sciences 15.0 22B (Hamilton) & 22B (Tauranga) The paper provides students with an understanding of scientific and culture-specific perspectives on issues in computing and mathematical sciences. Students will learn how these perspectives can be applied in diverse cultural, international, ethical, and professional contexts. DSIGN252 Cultural Perspectives for Design 15.0 22B (Hamilton) & 22X (Zhejiang University City College, Hangzhou China) The paper provides students with an understanding of culture-specific perspectives on design issues and the ability to apply these in diverse contexts. EDUCA200 Te Hononga Tangata 15.0 22B (Block) This paper prepares students to recognise and understand local and global cultural diversity, and to work competently and confidently in culturally appropriate ways with diverse others in educational contexts. ENGLI200 Global Fictions 15.0 22B (Hamilton) This paper examines literary responses to the contemporary world. We will study international writing that grapples with issues associated with gender, race, technology, terrorism, and climate change. GEOGY219 Māori Lands and Communities 15.0 22B (Hamilton) This paper introduces students to Maori geographical perspectives and examines key events that shape Maori communities and their relationships to land, water and other taonga. INTLC221 Understanding East Asia 15.0 22B (Hamilton) This paper offers a critical examination of historical traditions and contemporary life in East Asia, with a focus on China and Japan, and their roles within a global context. This paper is taught in English and is open to all students, including those who have no prior knowledge of Chinese and Japanese. INTLC222 Food Practices & Cultural Journeys 15.0 22A (Online) This paper explores aspects of European and Latin American cultures, history and society. This paper is taught in English and is open to all students, including those who have no prior knowledge of French and Spanish. LINGS203 Language, Society and Culture 15.0 22B (Hamilton) This paper explores the relationship between language and culture, particularly in the context of changing Pacific cultures, and relates topics to the main themes of modern linguistics and anthropology. MAORI200 Mana Wahine 15.0 22B (Hamilton) This paper examines foundational aspects of mana wahine scholarship, the impact of colonisation on Maori and Indigenous women, and the resistant spaces negotiated by Maori women including their contributions to decolonisation. MAORI202 Ngā Iho Matua: Māori Philosophy 15.0 22A (Hamilton) This paper examines the philosophical underpinnings of seminal tikanga Maori concepts, and their influence both historically and in contemporary Maori culture. MAORI203 Decolonising Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples 15.0 22A (Hamilton) & 22A (Online) The paper looks at the detrimental effects that research has historically had on Indigenous peoples and the relatively recent creation of research methodologies by Indigenous peoples to counteract Imperial research, and to empower and decolonise. MAORI204 Māori, Pacific and Indigenous Health and Wellbeing 15.0 22A (Hamilton) & 22A (Tauranga) This paper looks at health and wellbeing from Maori and Indigenous perspectives, including models and frameworks in relation to Health, Sport, Human Performance and Indigenous communities. MAORI206 Te Reo Whaiaro: Expressive Language 15.0 22X (Online) This paper further reinforces students' acquisition of introductory language components taught in MAORI211 and MAORI212, expanding on the fundamentals of introductory language form, instruction, expressions of emotion and colloquialisms. MAORI210 Te Whakahaumanu Reo: Māori and Indigenous Language Revitalisation 15.0 22B (Hamilton) This paper will explore the impact of colonisation on indigenous languages and examine a range of current and historic language revitalisation initiatives, with a particular focus on Te Reo Maori. MAORI211 Te Reo Māori: Intermediate 1 15.0 22A (Hamilton), 22X (Hamilton) & 22X (Tauranga) This paper builds on the skills acquired in MAORI112, developing a complexity in language skills required in the communication of detailed travel directions, describing internal and external characteristics of a person and describing objects. MAORI212 Te Reo Māori: Intermediate 2 15.0 22B (Hamilton), 22X (Hamilton) & 22X (Tauranga) This paper builds on the skills acquired in MAORI211, developing further language skills required in Maori for communication about feelings, emotions, and describing the weather. MAORI222 He Ao Hurihuri He Ao Tuakiri: Evolving Māori Culture and Identity 15.0 22B (Tauranga) A critical examination of the diverse realities of being Maori in a changing world, highlighting local and global impacts on Maori culture and identity. MAORI250 Māori Politics 15.0 22B (Online) & 22B (Tauranga) This paper examines Maori and Indigenous politics in a broad sense, from key ideas such as sovereignty, tino rangatiratanga, and autonomy, through to crucial forms of resistance via various political structures including local, Iwi, national and global Indigenous movements. MAORI251 Raranga Whakairo: Design Elements in Māori Fibre Arts 15.0 No occurrences This paper is a multi-disciplinary focused paper providing students with the opportunity to understand a Maori worldview through the lens of Maori fibre arts praxis. MAORI251 is an introduction to raranga whakairo, the theoretical and practical application of patterns within the weave. Students learn to raranga and critically examine customary/traditional techniques in modern day applications. MAORI257 Kapa Haka: Noble Dances of the Māori 15.0 No occurrences An examination of the theoretical and practical components of kapa haka as an influential and political phenomena of expression of Aotearoa/New Zealand and its influence on the landscape. MNMGT202 Intercultural Perspectives on Organisations 15.0 22A (Hamilton), 22B (Hamilton) & 22B (Tauranga) This paper provides students with the skills and knowledge to become competent and confident in culturally diverse contexts, locally and globally, and to understand how people behave in culturally diverse organisational contexts. It includes an introduction to matauranga Maori. Learning is cemented through case studies, reflection,... PACIS200 Pacific Migration, Diaspora and Identity 15.0 22B (Hamilton) This paper looks at the various socio-historic influences on migration in the Pacific and the relationship between Indigenous cultures of origin and diasporic cultures and identities formed in countries such as Aotearoa/New Zealand, Australia and the US. PACIS201 Pacific Texts 15.0 No occurrences This paper explores the diverse written, film, media and online texts of the Pacific region. The main focus is on contemporary texts; these will be contextualised by an examination of traditional Pacific textual forms and the histories of textual production in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. TEEDU201 Te Hononga Tangata Cultural Dimensions of Education 15.0 22B (Hamilton), 22B (Tauranga) & 22X (Online) This paper prepares students to recognise and understand local and global cultural diversity, and to work competently and confidently in culturally appropriate ways with diverse others in educational contexts. 300 Level
Code Paper Title Points Occurrence / Location ENGEN370 Engineering and the Environment 15.0 22A (Hamilton) This paper covers sustainability in engineering design and renewable energy generation through the critical lens of environmental impact assessment, risk and resilience, sustainable infrastructure and development, material and energy flow analysis, emissions, carbon accounting and life cycle analysis. MAORI302 Mātauranga Māori, Indigenous Knowledges 15.0 22A (Hamilton) & 22A (Tauranga) This paper looks at the influence and forms that Matauranga Maori has had and has taken in various postcolonial formations, including in science and research, education, policy and social reform. MAORI303 Critical Indigenous Theory 15.0 22B (Hamilton) & 22B (Tauranga) This paper looks at the key theoretical influences, from Marxism to post-structuralism, upon critical Indigenous studies and the most significant writings by those Indigenous scholars who have chosen to engage with critical theory. MAORI304 Sustainability in Māori, Pacific and Indigenous Contexts 15.0 22A (Hamilton) This paper looks at Indigenous epistemological formations of sustainability as one of the most pressing issues for Indigenous peoples particularly in the Pacific, and also as a concept where Indigenous peoples can be prominent in influencing discourses. MAORI310 Ngā Pepeha, ngā Whakataukī me ngā Kupu Whakaari: Proverbial and Prophetic Sayings 15.0 22A (Hamilton) This paper concentrates on examining and analysing proverbial, prophetic and colloquial sayings within Maori culture. Ko te hangaitanga o tenei pepa, he matapaki, he wananga i nga pepeha, whakatauki, huahuatau me nga kupu whakaari a te Maori. MAORI311 Te Reo Māori: Advanced 1 15.0 22A (Hamilton), 22X (Hamilton) & 22X (Tauranga) I tua atu o MAORI212, arotahi ai tenei akoranga ki te whakahohonu, whakawhanui ake i te reo me nga pukenga o te akonga ki te tuhituhi, ki te whakawhitiwhiti korero, ki te whakaatu me te whakamarama i nga kaupapa rereke o nga horopaki o te ao tawhito, te ao hou hoki. This paper builds on the language acquired in MAORI212 further dev... MAORI312 Te Reo Māori: Advanced 2 15.0 22B (Hamilton), 22X (Hamilton) & 22X (Tauranga) I tua atu o MAORI311, ko ta tenei pepa he ata kuhu ki roto i etahi rangahau e hangai nei ki te whaikorero me te karanga, waihoki, ka kuhuna nga kano ahuatanga o te reo tonu, ara te kiwaha, te whakatauki me nga tongikura. I ko atu i enei, ka arohaehaetia nga manukura Maori. This paper builds on the language acquired in MAORI311 broa... MAORI316 Te Reo Ahurei 15.0 22B (Hamilton) This paper is intended for students who have completed Maori language proficiency to intermediate level or higher. The emphasis will be on developing oral and critical skills in the use of the Maori language and English with particular attention on the critical examination and understanding of composition styles, including performa... MAORI350 Mana Motuhake 15.0 22B (Hamilton) A critical analysis investigating tribal reconfigurations of mana motuhake in the 21st century, focusing in particular on economic, environmental, cultural and political development. MAORI390 Kaupapa Rangahau 15.0 22X (Hamilton) A Directed Study is a taught paper that enables suitably qualified undergraduate students to undertake a piece of extended Indigenous Studies research. Students enrolled in this paper work on a focused piece of research under the guidance of academic staff with relevant expertise. PACIS300 Contemporary Critical Issues in the Pacific 15.0 22A (Hamilton) This paper provides an in-depth examination of a number of contemporary critical issues in the Pacific as identified by leading Pacific scholars, writers, artists, auteurs and activists. SCIEN305 Science and Mātauranga Māori 15.0 22A (Hamilton), 22A (Tauranga), 22C (Hamilton) & 22C (Tauranga) This paper will provide science graduates with an understanding of both scientific and Matauranga Maori perspectives on topical issues and the ability to apply these in a Vision Matauranga context.
2022 Catalogue of Papers information current as of : 31 May 2023 12:20pm