Te Rau Puawai earns top marks

Source: Massey University – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Te Rau Puawai earns top marks


Particpants at Te Rau Puawai 20th anniversary hui at Massey’s Auckland campus.


With an average pass rate of 95 per cent, Massey University’s Te Rau Puawai programme has achieved phenomenal academic success for its students, but more importantly has had a far reaching impact on Māori mental health services in New Zealand.

Since its inception in 1998, almost 400 new graduates have been added to the Māori mental health workforce with many now filling influential roles throughout the sector.

Its success was marked last week with a special event in Auckland to celebrate its 20th year.  Minister for Māori Development Nanaia Mahuta praised the thought leadership of Professor Emeritus Sir Mason Durie who developed the programme in response to concerns around the lack of Māori employed within the mental health sector.

Professor Durie told the hui the original concept was simple – to provide scholarships for Māori students to study health qualitifications with a goal of 100 graduates over five years, hence the name, Te Rau Puawai (100 blossoms). He recounted how he and fellow academic Taiarahia Black travelled to Christchurch to petition the Health Funding Authority for financial support thinking they would most likely get only five to 10 scholarships. But the Authority offered to fund the entire programme as a workforce development intiative specifically for mental health. The first 100 graduates were delivered within the five year target and the contract has continued ever since with the support of the Ministry of Health – Health Workforce New Zealand.

It quickly became clear that providing scholarships along with active student support, framed within a Māori context was a receipe for success. A small team were tasked with providing academic and pastoral care, including weekly phone calls, hui and visits to students, many of whom studied by distance. The small team now consists of administrative coordinator Robyn Richardson, academic coordinator Byron Perkins, Elaine Duval and a cohort of Satellite Support Mentors who are stragetically placed throughout New Zealand.

Professor Durie believes there are four elements that are key to the programme. The first was high expectations. “The students knew that excellence was required and if they got a B+ then there would be a discussion about how to get to an A.”  Secondly, whānaungatanga or providing students with a sense of whānau. Professor Durie says regular calls to check on progress and twice yearly hui ensured students felt connected. Thirdly, an understanding of the importance of tikanga or Māori custom provided strong cultural support. Professor Durie says Te Rau Puawai was about more than attaining qualifications. “There was always a sense that this was about more than the individual – it was about the health of our people.”

This year has been monumental for Te Rau Puawai. In March, Massey University recognised the collaboration with the Ministry of Health – Health Workforce New Zealand, by awarding them the 2018 Partnership Excellence Award at the Defining Excellence Awards at Parliament. Not only did this award recognise the successful partnership between the two organisations, but the success and ongoing championship of Te Rau Puawai and its contribution to positive Māori Mental Health in New Zealand.

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Nursing evening can answer your questions

Source: NorthTec – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Nursing evening can answer your questions

Anyone interested in studying nursing at NorthTec can come along to special information evenings to find out more.

Information sessions about the Bachelor of Nursing will be held at both the Raumanga and Kaitaia campuses, on Thursday, 10 May.

The Raumanga event takes place in the Interactive Learning Centre lecture theatre (Room D350), and runs from 5pm to 7pm. This is located near Gate 1 in Raumanga Valley Road.

The Kaitaia session will be held in Room 1 of the campus in Oxford Street, and runs from 4pm to 6pm.

All are welcome to find out about this popular, three-year degree programme, and attendees will have the chance to ask any questions they may have. The NorthTec programme combines online delivery with classroom teaching, with clinical placements in a variety of healthcare settings.

Both information sessions will feature a presentation on the degree programme from senior nursing staff, followed by an open session for questions. Nurse lecturers will give an overview of the programme, as well as explaining the entry criteria and application process. They will also give options of other programmes available to people if they do not meet the entry criteria for nursing.

A member of NorthTec’s enrolments team will also be present, to supply enrolment packs and answer any questions around the process.

PMC’s Bearing Witness 2018 crew arrive in Fiji

Source: Pacific Media Centre

Headline: PMC’s Bearing Witness 2018 crew arrive in Fiji – Analysis published with permission of PMC

Touchdown Fiji … Last week: Our intrepid Pacific Media Centre Bearing Witness climate media team Blessen Tom (left below) and Hele Ikimotu Christopher prepping in Auckland before departure … Now: On the ground at the University of the South Pacific.

Full story

Touchdown Fiji … Last week: Our intrepid Pacific Media Centre Bearing Witness climate media team Blessen Tom (left below) and Hele Ikimotu Christopher prepping in Auckland before departure

Climate change continues to take its toll on small island nations such as Kiribati and Tuvalu. Image: File – Kiribati in 2009. Jodie Gatfield/AusAID/Wansolwara

Sunday, April 15, 2018

MIL OSI

Local history tells a bigger story – Whanganui series

Source: Massey University – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Local history tells a bigger story – Whanganui series


Professor Glyn Harper


Victoria Cross recipient Alfred Shout

New Zealand soldiers – from heroes to conmen – who served in other countries’ armies during WWI is the topic of a public seminar on April 17 by eminent historian Professor Glyn Harper.

He opens a five-part series running for the third year in a partnership between the Alexander Heritage and Research Library, the Whanganui Regional Museum and Massey University’s W. H. Oliver Humanities Research Academy. 

Professor Harper’s talk, For King and other Countries: New Zealanders at war 1914-1919, is a taster for his new book due out next year. The series, titled Home and Away, includes new and established historians talking about their research on the environment, immigration, war propaganda and naval history.

Professor Harper will share some of his latest research findings, including that a much higher number of New Zealanders than previously thought – more than 10,000 – enlisted in foreign armies during WWI, for a variety of reasons. Around 4000 joined the British army, often those from rich, middle-class families for the prestige. A further 4000 joined the Australian Imperial Army because it was easier to enlist, especially for younger, or older and infirm men who did not make the cut for the New Zealand army. Others joined armies of France, Canada, India and South Africa, and several even enlisted in the German army.

Professor Harper’s talk also touches on New Zealand war heroes in foreign armies, such as Alfred Shout – a New Zealand-born and Australian recipient of the Victoria Cross, and other distinguished soldiers and servicewomen, as well as the occasional conman or rogue whose stories he has uncovered.

The series aims to raise awareness of the presence of history in the local community as well as celebrating students embarking on careers in “the rich field of New Zealand historical research,” says the series coordinator Associate Professor Kirsty Carpenter. 

Professor Harper’s talk highlights the link between local and global history, she says. “Whanganui’s link to this was by correspondence with relatives and connections to the Whanganui Collegiate School, where a number of the soldiers who Glyn is going to talk about had been students.”  

Small events encapsulate grander stories

Local history is never just local – it fits into a much broader picture about what happened and how we understand the past, says Dr Carpenter, a specialist on the French Revolution who lectures in the School of Humanities at the Manawatū campus.

She says the key inspiration for the seminars is; “raising awareness of the value of our own history in the locality, and how local history and local archives fit and filter into national history and national archives –likewise to international history and international archives.”

“What has small beginnings can end up as central to the history of continents and empires. All the pieces of the puzzle are important, and they begin with people valuing their own family history and local history enough to preserve it and the documents that come into their possession. Only in this way can we arrive at histories of the local communities, towns and provinces of New Zealand.”

Dr Carpenter says the seminars in this series have “played a role in uniting people with interests, either as future university students, or adults interested in their family connections and local history with professional academic historians and trainee historians.”

She is currently working on a book – with local and distant links – about refugees during the French Revolution, including one who stowed away to New Zealand under an alias, married a niece of Te Rauparaha (chief and warrior of Ngati Toa who played a lead role in the Musket Wars), with which he had eight children, leaving a trail of New Zealand descendants right down to the present day. 

Venues: Alexander Research and Heritage Library, or the Davis Theatre, Wanganui Regional Museum. 

Tuesday 17 April, 5:30 pm, Davis Theatre

Glyn Harper: For King and other Countries: New Zealanders at war 1914-1919.

Glyn Harper is the Professor of War Studies at Massey University. He has been the Massey Project Manager of  the Centenary History of the New Zealand and the First World War, and is published widely – most recently; The Battle for North Africa. El Alamein and the Turning Point for World War II.

Sunday 29 April, 2.00 pm, Alexander Library    

Jess McLean: You can count on a good round of applause: Propaganda and the New Zealand public during WWII 

Jess McLean has completed her Master’s on ‘Propaganda and the NZ public during  WWII’ supervised by Dr Rachael Bell (Massey History Programme).

Tuesday 15 May, 5.30 pm, Davis Theatre

Catherine Knight: Our Rivers: complex histories, hopeful futures.

Catherine Knight is an independent historian living in the Manawatū. She is the author of New Zealand’s Rivers: An Environmental History, and contributor to Rachael Bell’s NZ Between the Wars (Massey University Press, 2017).

Sunday 27 May, 2.00 pm, Alexander Library

Gail Romano: ‘Generous action’ and ‘ministerial muddling’: Managing a Royal Navy battlecruiser tour in the Dominion in 1913.

Gail Romano is writing her history master’s on the 1913 visit of battlecruiser HMS New Zealand to this country and what the visit can tell us about ourselves in that pre-war period. She is supervised by Dr David Littlewood (Massey History Programme).

Sunday 10 June, 2.00 pm, Alexander Library

Sue McCliskie: The Nelson NZ Company Emigrants: How Family Histories can shed light on issues  of connection and mobility in New Zealand.

Sue McCliskie is doing a history master’s, supervised by Professor Michael Belgrave, on the Nelson New Zealand Company Emigrants, 1841-50 (Massey History Programme).

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Home affordability fluctuates across the country

Source: Massey University – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Home affordability fluctuates across the country


Home affordability has improved in some regions, but not others.


The lastest Massey University Home Affordability Report shows mixed results, with improvements in affordability for all regions except Northland, Hawke’s Bay and Central Otago Lakes in the most recent quarter.

Of these regions, only Hawke’s Bay has shown a decline in affordability for two consecutive quarters. However, over a 12-month period, all regions except Canterbury/Westland have become more unaffordable.

Report author Associate Professor Graham Squires says the changing picture across the country makes it hard to make predictions for the longer term.

“Given the mixed results, it is too early to tell whether the longer-term trend is declining affordability, particularly as house prices continue to rise significantly in some regions.”

The divergence between Central Otago Lakes and the rest of the country has reached record proportions.


House prices are the main driver of affordability

The report, which covers the period from December 2017 to February 2018, shows fluctuations in median house prices were the main driver of changes in affordability across the country. Most regions saw a quarterly decline in median house price but there were increases in Northland ($25,000), Hawke’s Bay ($29,950) and Central Otago Lakes ($53,500).

“When you look at the year-on-year changes in house prices, however, there has been a national increase of $35,000 in the median house price value,” Dr Squires says.

“We saw a resurgence in house prices for many regions last quarter, followed by a fall-back for some and a rise for others in this quarter. The very different sub-market characteristics of regional property may play a role in this regional volitility – particularly when we look at Hawke’s Bay and Central Otago Lakes compared to the dominant market of Auckland.”

Central Otago Lakes breaks all records

The country’s most affordable regions (Southland, Manawatū/Whanganui and Taranaki) remain unchanged, as do its least affordable regions (Central Otago Lakes and Auckland).

“The surge in house prices in Central Otago Lakes means the region is now a record 81 per cent less affordable than the rest of the country,” Dr Squires says. “The region’s median house price is now 15.4 times its average annual wage, compared to Auckland where house prices are 13.1 times annual wages.”

While affordability concerns are growing in Northland and Hawke’s Bay, house price-to-income ratios in these regions – at 8.0 and 7.4 respectively – are still considerably more favourable than Central Otago Lakes and Auckland. 

“While the situation is changing from quarter to quarter, it is clear that New Zealand home affordability is still a national and regional problem in the short and medium term,” Dr Squires says.

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Veterinary researcher to lead ethics

Source: Massey University – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Veterinary researcher to lead ethics

Professor Craig Johnson, a veterinary researcher, has been appointed as Massey University’s director of ethics.

In his new role, Professor Johnson will have overall responsibility for the University’s ethics and responsible researcher conduct, working closely with the Human and Animal Ethics Committees and Ethics Team.

Professor Johnson has been a member of Massey University’s Animal Ethics Committee for twelve years, chairing the committee for the previous six years. He is also deputy chair of the National Animal Ethics Advisory Committee and the Australia and New Zealand Council for the Care of Animals used in Research and Teaching.

Dean, research Associate Professor Tracy Riley says: “As a Professor of Veterinary Neurophysiology and co-director of the Animal Welfare Science and Bioethics Centre, Professor Johnson brings immense experience to the role, especially as Massey’s first Director with animal ethics expertise”.

Professor Johnson joined Massey in 2001. He holds a Bachelor of Veterinary Science from Liverpool University (1989) and doctorate from Cambridge University (1997). His research interests include pain relief in animals and the welfare of animals at slaughter.

He commences in his role new next week.

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Planning scholar awarded for practice book

Source: Massey University – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Planning scholar awarded for practice book


Associate Professor Caroline Miller, co-editor and contributor to an award-winning new book on planning practice.


Book cover

We are all affected by planners and planning regulations, whether doing up or building a home, to council decisions about public spaces and facilities.

A Massey expert on the subject has received an award for her new book – the first comprehensive guide on planning for students and professionals.

Associate Professor Caroline Miller, based in the School of People, Environment and Planning, is the co-winner of the John Mawson Award of Merit for a book, Planning Practice in New Zealand,(published by Lexis Nexis). A co-editor with Dr Lee Beattie, she wrote several chapters for the book – an up-to-date and broad discussion of the practical issues and challenges faced in the application of planning law in New Zealand. 

The award was announced at the New Zealand Planning Institute’s  2018 conference recently.

Dr Miller, a former planning practitioner with 20 years’ experience and a particular interest in the Resource Management Act, says she and her co-editor realised there was a need for a book on day-to-day planning practice, covering the gamut from rural planning to heritage and professional ethics.

“We saw it as a book that would complement the legal perspectives while bridging the gap between theory and practice,” she says.

Creating a book, which comprises 21 chapters, was “challenging” in that it caters for a diverse audience, she adds.

Parts of the book reflect Dr Miller’s strong research interests, such as the involvement of Māori in planning processes, the development of the planning profession, and professional conduct and practice.

The work begins with an introduction to the New Zealand planning process and relevant legislation before discussing the implementation of the Resource Management Act and examining topics such as the Local Government Act; natural hazards; urban design and heritage design, and transportation planning. 

Written by leading academics and planning practitioners – including a number of former Massey students – the publishers describe the book as; “a unique and invaluable resource for all those involved in New Zealand planning practice including planners, planning advisors and consultants, architects, heritage consultants, compliance managers, resource officers and legal advisors.”

Planning Practice in New Zealand is already proving to be an important resource for students and professionals alike, and this award is well-deserved recognition from your peers for your efforts and passion in this important work,” said Chris Murray, Head of content management, LexisNexis New Zealand Ltd.

Dr Miller, who is based at the Manawatū campus, is a former board member of the New Zealand Planning Institute and received a Distinguished Service Award from that Institute in 2007. 

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Sea lion colony confirmed, but work still needed

Source: Massey University – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Sea lion colony confirmed, but work still needed


Sea lion pup enjoying a creek in the forest.


While celebrating the Department of Conservation’s announcement of a New Zealand sea lion (rāpoka) breeding colony on Stewart Island, a Massey University marine mammal specialist is calling further action to protect the endangered species.

Beginning with a two-person team eight years ago, Massey University’s Associate Professor Louise Chilvers has been visiting the island each year to make pup counts.

“Getting up to 55 pups this year was an exciting find for us, but it doesn’t make up for the 1500 pups that are no longer born at the Auckland Islands. The main human impact at the Auckland Islands is local fisheries interaction, so the establishment of this new little population away from that interaction is so important for the endangered New Zealand sea lion.”

“When it comes to the five sea lion species of the world, ours is the least abundant. South American, Californian, and Steller sea lion populations range in the hundreds of thousands, while the New Zealand and Australian barely break 10,000. These pups and colony are extremely special, so hopefully now there will be an increase in efforts to ensure their protection, and that of the others in the south, and that means not only DOC, but all of New Zealand.”

“These are our own New Zealand sea lions, only found here and they are unique. Take their forest-dwelling for example, none of the other sea lion species around the world do this. The more we know, the more we can do to protect them.”

Dr Chilvers recently returned from undertaking the count on Stewart Island, working with a team of five from the Stewart Island and Southland Department of Conservation areas and Auckland Zoo.

“Stewart Island is an important place to focus efforts on research to better inform their management, as has been outlined in the DOC Threat Management Plan, but equally sea lion populations around the rest of New Zealand’s mainland and the sub-Antarctics are still threatened by human activity.”

“Last year we tagged the pup of a female that we tagged as a pup on Stewart Island from five years previously. It was pretty special to see the generations are staying in the area.

“This work is pretty full-on though, and over the eight-day trip we were working very hard. Sea lions can grow to weigh around 400-500 kilograms, as pups at the age we are tagging them they are 30 to 50 kilograms so not an easy task. But we would never have even been there to do the work if it wasn’t for the community’s help in the beginning.”

That community help came in the form of sightings and photos eight years ago. There had been reports of sea lions breeding on Stewart Island, but never any photos to confirm pupping. So information sheets were sent out with hunting block permits for the island because people would often spot the sea lions when hunting or hiking on the island.

“This wasn’t intended to be an accurate count because females actually raise pups mostly in the forest, not the beaches like people assume. It’s also hard to tell the difference between a juvenile male and an adult female, so we needed to go ourselves – but we could only make the trip if we knew they were there. “In the end, people sent back information about sea lions they saw – and we had three females and five pups reported and shown in one photo, so that gave us all the information we needed to start the counts and research.

“That community engagement was so crucial for us to make a case about heading to Stewart Island and it has resulted in this exciting announcement eight years on of the first New Zealand sea lion colony on the New Zealand mainland in over 150 years.”

Sea lions on the beach.


 


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Capturing and analysing limb injuries in race horses

Source: Massey University – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Capturing and analysing limb injuries in race horses


The model, with the limb segments as
determined from CT, and the muscles
placed with their exact origins and insertions. 

Animated model, with markers on the
limb segments

Animated model, with markers on the 
limb segments

 

Massey University researchers are investigating limb injuries in race horses by capturing the 3D movements of their limbs on camera and modelling it on computers.

Massey Equine Group’s Dr Bob Colborne and PhD student Alienor Bardin, a mechanical engineer, have funding from The New Zealand Equine Trust to attack this problem.

“The various equestrian industries in New Zealand make up about 2 per cent of the country’s GDP, and about a third of horses that start training and racing are retired and lost due to injury. About three-quarters of these are musculoskeletal injuries. These injuries, therefore, cause a fair amount of wastage, both in terms of the welfare impact on the horse and secondly, to the income potential. The purpose of our work is to assess the effects of variable ground surfaces on the forces applied to the limb during gait.”

The experimental work involves having the horses trot and canter along a runway in a sand arena over a force platform embedded in the surface in front of six infrared cameras that record the 3D movement of the horse’s limb segments on a consistent surface.

This baseline data allows the limb segments to be modelled and animated and allows an estimation of the forces applied to the ligaments and tendons. It can then be used to test the strain in ligaments and tendons when the limb is perturbed with variable footing and ground reaction forces – a softer, or harder than expected surface in the limb’s stance phase.  

This will allow the researchers to determine whether horses are capable of responding to a sudden change in ground condition during the perturbed stance phase, or if the response is not until the following stance phase, at which point the ground surface may have changed back.

“The physical properties of equestrian riding and racing surfaces have been associated with limb  injuries in horses, and most of the research in this area has focussed on quantifying the surface’s ability to absorb the concussive landing and shear forces between the hoof and ground.”

“On soft ground, the surface absorbs the landing forces, and so the limb can afford to be relatively stiff. On a harder surface, the limb becomes more compliant so it can attenuate the concussive impacts and reduce the impact shocks to the limb. However, this compliance may come at a cost… if the distal joints are less supported by tendon tension, then disruptive perturbations caused by hard uneven ground may cause the hoof to twist on impact and result in ligament or joint damage.”

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Facing the future – young leaders front up

Source: Massey University – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Facing the future – young leaders front up


Participants in the Future Leaders hui at the Manawatū campus, with political, civic and academic leaders.


Iraia Nuku wants to set up a youth centre in his home town of Kawerau, while Serena Findlay hopes young people in Otaki will add their views and voices to community developments. 

They were among 150 young people at a national hui on youth leadership at the Manawatū campus last weekend.

Facing an uncertain future – from finding meaningful work and a sense of identity, to coping in a world affected by climate change – can be daunting for many young people. Aspiring youth leaders shared their hopes and ideas for change and met others from throughout the country confronting a variety of similar concerns and issues for their generation. 

Iraia says his aim is to inspire rangatahi in his community to “be the best that they can be” and to “realise there are no boundaries to achieving this if they have the motivation”.

Boredom, and the negative behaviour this can lead to, is a big issue he thinks needs addressing. His dream is a properly funded and resourced youth centre in Kawerau, “where youth can relax and be safe, whether to learn a new skill or hang out with friends, and a have a space where they feel valued”. 

He says the weekend, hosted by the College of Humanities and Social Sciences in partnership with the charitable trust Inspiring Stories, which runs the Future Leaders initiative, was “one of the best things I’ve ever done”. He says he is keen to take his new knowledge and insights back to the young people in Kawerau.

Iraia Nuku shares his dreams for the youth of Kawerau where he comes from.


Youth voices need to be heard by those in power

Serena says she wants to bring about change in her community, as “it’s really important for young people to have their voices heard.”

Many young people feel oppressed, she says, and feel a lack of opportunity to express their needs and views because older people mostly hold positions of power. Encouraging a sense of belonging and value is a big issue for youth in her community as many just want to leave, she says. 

Serena Findlay, from Otaki, says young people’s voices need to be heard.


Older generation share their stories 

Academic, civic and political leaders at the event shared their own youthful recollections of being discouraged from seeing themselves as achievers, and how they overcame negative messages.

Pro Vice-Chancellor Distinguished Professor Paul Spoonley told the audience that as a young guy he did not know what the future held. “When I left school, my teachers said, ‘Not suitable for university experience.’ How wrong they were.”

“My passion is igniting people and communities to build brighter worlds,” he said, urging youth to make their own future, shape their destiny and follow their passion. 

“We know, according to the latest OECD research, that people of your generation on average will have up to 17 different jobs in your working lives. You will need to redefine the world we live in. We need your thinking, your leadership and your ideas.”

Guy Ryan, the chief executive and founder of Inspiring Stories, spoke of a similar experience. “I started this programme as a tiny little idea three years ago. I was never recommended to go to university – but I did. And I fell in love with learning.

“We face big challenges today – climate change, mental health challenges, inequality. We have still so far to go. Imagine if every young New Zealander unleashed their own passion to change the world,” he said.

Guest speaker the Hon Peeni Henare (Ngāti Hine, Ngāpuhi), Minister for Youth, Community and Voluntary Sector for Whānau Ora and Associate Minister for Social Development, also spoke of his early life challenges as a teenaged father and how he navigated these. “In Year 12, I became a young father. But I went on to university. And today I am a government minister. So, you are not defined by the steps in your life.”

He quoted his grandfather, Sir James Henare, who advised him: “Don’t be old before your time. Enjoy being young. With your successes and your failures, be humble.”

Mr Henare urged young people to look after themselves. “We know there are many youth mental health issues. Don’t put pressure on yourself.”

Professor Meihana Durie, head of Massey’s School of Māori Knowledge who welcomed everyone with a mihi whakatau, asked the young audience to “think of all the leaders who have gone before you, and who met many challenges along the way. We all have a starting point, and some kind of spark that starts us on a journey. And that journey never ends.”

Vice-Chancellor Jan Thomas told the hui that Massey is all about leadership, which can be hard to define. “Look for leaders you admire and aspire to be like. What makes them so powerful and influential?

“Recently I heard former US President Barack Obama speak. He said leadership is about three things:

Listening; surrounding yourself with people smarter than you are who share your values and passion; and remembering that you are a vessel for others’ hopes and dreams.”

The hui was one of several regional and national events in the Future Leaders programme planned for this year. By the end, participants will have gained a clearer understanding of factors shaping the socio-economic issues affecting their community, built up a network of mentors to share ideas and advice with and be better prepared to assume leadership roles.

(from left) Ian McKelvie (MP for Rangitikei); Distingiushed Professor Paul Spoonley; Inspiring Stories CEO Guy Ryan; Vice-Chancellor Professor Jan Thomas, Hon Peeni Henare and Palmerston North mayor Grant Smith.

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