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Adult Learner's Week - He Tangata Matauranga

31 October - 6 November 2011

Adult Learners' Week/He Tangata Mātauranga is a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) initiative supported by the Tertiary Education Commission, adult and community education providers at a local level and the New Zealand National Commission for UNESCO. The Week also incorporates International Literacy Day on September 8 each year.

 

Aims of Adult Learners' Week He Tangata Mātauranga

Celebrate the efforts, achievements and contributions of adult learners, educators and providers at both regional and national events

Strengthen adult and community education and raise public awareness of the rich variety of learning opportunities for adults

Widen access to learning opportunities and encourage more people to seek advice and guidance about returning to learn

Foster collaborative and cooperative networks and pathways among those who share an interest in adult learning

     

Click here to go to the Adult and Community Education Aotearoa (ACE) Website to find out more about Adult Learner's Week 2011

 
Youth Week 2011 PDF Print E-mail

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Step Up, Take Responsibility, Be YOUth

 

Youth Week 2011 kicks off in Christchurch this week with a huge free concert.
“Youth Week 2011 isn’t just about young people stepping up and taking responsibility, it’s also about the rest of the community stepping up and realising all the great things young people do,” says Arataiohi spokeswoman, Andrea Leersnyder
“As most people now know, after the earthquakes the Student Army stepped up and took responsibility along with scores of others in the wake of devastation. Youth Week celebrates them and all other young people in our country who are simply awesome New Zealanders.”
This year the NZ National Commission for UNESCO is a major sponsor of Youth Week 2011.
Tomorrow’s concert is free and will be held in the “Big Top” outside the University of Canterbury Student Association at Ilam Road. Live performers include Bang, Bang Eche, Chartfest, Common Ground with DJs Annarchy, Chris Ellis, Arkotype and The Baker.
Guest speakers include Student Army leader Sam Johnson and Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker.
 
 
Canterbury Earthquake Disaster PDF Print E-mail

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Christchurch Earthquake Appeal

A powerful earthquake struck Canterbury at lunchtime on the 22 February 2011.  Five days later 147 bodies have been recovered while hundreds of people remain missing.  It is one of our country's worst natural disasters in recorded history.  Historic Christchurch has been devastated and search teams continue to scour the city's ruins.  Countries from around the world have been quick to offer support to New Zealand at this terrible time.  The NZ government has launched a global fundraiser for the recovery effort.

Click here to see how you can make a difference

 
Speech to UNESCO General Conference 2009 - Bryan Gould PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 30 November 2009 20:48

Speech to the UNESCO General Conference

September 2009

Chair of the New Zealand National Commission

Bryan Gould 

Tena koutou katoa kua huihui mai nei i tenei ra.
(English translation: Greetings to all who have gathered here today).
Mr President, Ladies and Gentlemen
In 1946, when UNESCO’s Constitution came into force, New Zealand was the second country to step forward to sign it. We did so, in the aftermath of a tragic conflict, so that the instinct for peace should take hold in the minds of new generations. So, with other founder members, we signed up for a future built on the life of the mind and the heart and the spirit – on education, culture, the sciences, and the free exchange of information and ideas.
Sixty three years later, New Zealand continues to support UNESCO’s goals. Both at home, in managing our own affairs, and in offering an example internationally and particularly in the Pacific sub-region, we try to demonstrate through our actions the value of UNESCO’s agenda for progress.
So, we are strong supporters of education for sustainable development and we have an active network of ASPnet schools committed to UNESCO’s values. In science, we focus on waiora, the Maori word for our sustainable fresh-water resources. The bicultural foundation of our country – Maori and pakeha – gives us a strong base to take advantage of the growing cultural diversity that enriches our society. And we continue to enjoy, and encourage others to emulate our commitment to, a free press and the free exchange of ideas.
What we seek is to lead by example, to cast new light on old problems, to think strategically, to change attitudes, to open minds, to know and understand more of ourselves and of others.
We like to think that New Zealand lives UNESCO’s ideals. We do so at what is another critical moment in the world’s affairs. The global recession may not be a disaster on quite the scale of the Second World War, but it should lead us nevertheless to re-affirm the great value and importance of what UNESCO stands for. The recession, after all, was the end result of a doctrine that said that all that really mattered was the maximisation of profits for the masters of the global economy.
We now know that we cannot entrust human progress to the tender care of the bottom line. That way lies not just economic crisis, but ecological degradation, social disintegration, and international conflict. Man is not just an economic animal. The lessons of the recession should teach us that the way forward lies – not with ever faster and less responsible consumption of material things by a small fraction of the world’s population - but with learning more about and responding better to our relationships with each other and with our planet.

A General Conference is inevitably concerned with budgets, elections, resolutions, organisational structures and processes. But we must never lose sight of UNESCO’s true purposes, and each of our individual decisions should be judged according to whether it advances or hinders the achievement of those goals. So, New Zealand, from our vantage-point in the Pacific sub-region – the sub-region most distant from Paris and covering the greatest number of countries and the largest geographical area, but a sub-region challenged not only by immediate dangers of which last week’s tsunami is a sad and destructive example, but also by longer-term threats such as climate change - has naturally been a consistent advocate for decentralisation.  We welcome the report of the second task force review.    But modalities are less important than people. We continue to be concerned at the damaging delays in recruiting professional staff to the UNESCO Office for the Pacific in Apia.  There is no point in changing the structure if we cannot commit the resources to make it work.    Similarly, we are concerned about the performance indicators proposed in the draft 35C/5. We are not convinced that these largely quantitative performance indicators will provide a meaningful assessment of the Organisation's effectiveness.  They may be easily measured but they tell us little about our real achievements; at worst, their adoption could lead to a diversionary goal displacement.  We strongly encourage the Organisation to undertake further work on this issue. We continue to believe that working across sectors and themes is the way UNESCO should operate. The next Medium-Term Strategy UNESCO programme should, we believe, be organised around these intersectoral themes with a Secretariat that mirrors this structure.  Two years ago, my predecessor delivered her speech to the General Conference while wearing a Maori cloak or korowai.   I am similarly privileged today. The cloak that I wear has been gifted by the National Commission to UNESCO as a taonga or cultural treasure. It is a work reflecting the great skill of a traditional weaver who has brought together a range of materials to produce something of significance, value and beauty. It is, we like to think, a suitable metaphor for the role that UNESCO should and must play in tomorrow’s world.No reira, tena koutou katoa.(English translation: In conclusion, greetings to you all).

  
 
UNESCO NZ National Commission represented at General Conference
Friday, 30 October 2009 15:09

NZ National Commission for UNESCO chairman, Bryan Gould and a small delegation took part in the 35th Session of the organisation's General Conference in Paris this month.  They participated in a review of the Programme and Budget for the years 2011 and 2012, and considered a number of current issues such as climate change and the impact of the economic recession internationally. New Zealand was elected to the Intergovernmental Committee on MOST (Management of Social Transformations) and will be represented on that Committee by Professor Richard Bedford, of Waikato University. New Zealand will also have a position on the Legal Committee, represented by Victoria Hallum, Permanent Delegate to UNESCO from the New Zealand Embassy in Paris.  A number of key decisions were made, including the election of a new Director General. 

 

 
Irina Bokova of Bulgaria elected as UNESCO's 10th Director General
Friday, 30 October 2009 15:04

Bulgarian diplomat and politician, Irina Bokova has been elected Director-General of UNESCO by the 35th Session of the organisation's General Conference in Paris this month.  Ms Bokova is the first woman and the first Eastern European to head the organisation.  Ms Bokova has served as the Ambassador of Bulgaria to France as well as the nation's Permanent Delegate to UNESCO.  She studied at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations and at the School of Public Affairs of the University of Maryland in the United States.  Ms Bokova has served as Bulgaria's Minister and Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and as candidate to the post of Vice President of Bulgaria, she advocated her country's membership in NATO and the European Union.  Ms Bokova replaces outgoing Director General Koichiro Matsuura of Japan who has led the organisation for two terms.  Dr Matsuura has advanced a wide range of programmes including universal basic education, freshwater management and the preservation of living arts and culture.  He visited New Zealand in 2004.
 

 


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