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Three Little Birds Tikipunga opened

three years ago with our Mill Road Centre

following two years later. Since then we

have been striving to be an Early Childhood

Service that provided a setting that not only

overcame barriers for tamariki attending

ECE, authentic to the bi-cultural intent of

Te Whāriki, but more importantly engaged

with whānau in such a way that they were

empowered and able to collaborate and be

invested in their tamariki learning.

The vision of Three Little Birds however

started a long time prior to this, with a

dream by Wiwini Hakaraia (Owner), Elysa

(Manager) and Marc Thomson who wanted

to make a real difference in Te Tai Tokerau.

Wiwini envisioned an ECE service that

was inclusive and accessible to the wider

Whangarei community but more importantly

to those who for a variety of reasons were

not engaging in Early Childhood Education.

Te Tai Tokerau was the preference for a

variety of reasons with Wiwini having

whakapapa in the north and Elysa and Marc

having whānau in Whangarei it seemed the

obvious choice.

We believed all tamariki should be able to

engage in quality education so spent time

researching the barriers to why tamariki

were not participating. Research from the

Ministry of Education (2007) stated some of

the barriers were transportation, fees and

kai. Three Little Birds view was that although

we are a private childcare centre we believed

we could overcome these barriers within our

funding and offer whānau a real choice here

in Whangarei.

With the focus from the Ministry of

THREE LITTLE BIRDS

CHILDCARE

SUPPORTING WHĀNAU IN WHANGAREI

BY ELYSA SCHUSTER AND SIMONE BELTON

Education on raising educational

outcomes for Māori and Pacifica tamariki

and the statistics telling us that it was

primarily Māori tamariki that were not

participating within the Whangarei region

we concentrated on creating an authentic

bi-cultural setting. Right from the start with

our philosophy being underpinned by Te

Ao Māori we connected with whānau within

our community. This was important to our

kaupapa as tamariki who see their whānau

working in collaboration with their Kaiako

“gain a sense of continuity and of being

cared for” and experience a “trusting and

secure environment in which they can learn

and grow” (Whalley & the Pen Green Centre

Team, 2001, p. 95). We also could see

the value that came from whānau actively

participating in an ECE service. These

benefits include enhanced social support,

and parent learning and development

(Mitchell, Royal Tangaere, Mara, & Wylie,

2006).

As the dream started to take shape with the

purchase of our first house, renovations in

full swing, we began to build relationships

and venture into our wider community.

Kanohi ki te kanohi (face to face) was

the obvious choice while connecting with

tamariki and their whānau. Therefore

prior to opening both our centres we meet

whānau in their home a few times, getting

to know the tamariki and starting to form

reciprocal relationships and a sense of

belonging to our Three Little Birds whānau.

Tikipunga opened with 67 tamariki and Mill

Road opened with 85 tamariki all enrolled

before license was granted and doors

were even opened. The majority of these

tamariki had not been participating in Early

Childhood Education prior to coming to

Three Little Birds. By offering a free van

service, the centres providing all kai at no

cost and affordable fees our pre-enrolment

numbers confirmed for us that we were on

the right track in overcoming the barriers.

Underpinning this was our commitment that

whānau will have meaningful connections

with our Kaiako and management. Our

enrolment data also had both centres where

whānau identified as Māori at over 90%

reemphasising our philosophical intent of

being underpinned by Te Ao Māori.

Throughout our journey

whakawhānaungatanga and manaakitanga

has underpinned all we do and this has been

the back bone to building relationships with

whānau. Whānau rapidly recognised that we

were respectful, authentic and committed

to the principals of Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

Tamariki have Kaiako that value diversity,

are committed to the bi-cultural intent of Te

Whāriki and that genuinely love and care

for them. Though our original dream was

focused on areas of high need within our

community it is our belief that because

December 2017

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