Young Rangi's love for dinosaurs takes him to a land beyond his dreams. However the land is threatened, and Rangi has to make a quick decision in order to keep his new found friends safe. Written initially for the Huia Short Story Awards it's potential to become a beautiful picture book was soon obvious.
This book presents a range of perspectives on the way language, diversity, and identity are reflected in New Zealand children’s literature, based on the published research of Nicola Daly, an associate professor in the Division of Education of the University of Waikato, and her colleagues. The book is organised into two sections. The first section examines the use of Te Reo Māori and English in the text of New Zealand picturebooks, exploring the linguistic landscape of Māori-English bilingual picturebooks. The second section, The Pedagogical Potential of Picturebooks, explores how picturebooks featuring Māori, English, New Zealand Sign Language (NZSL), and Pacific languages reflect identity and support diversity in society. Research from several educational contexts, ranging from kindergarten to university, where picturebooks are used to support learning language and learning about language is also discussed. Themes of language, identity, and diversity are explored throughout the two sections and brought together in the concluding chapter’s discussion of the power of picturebooks. This book will be of interest to scholars in children’s literature and education; it may also be relevant to scholars in linguistics library and information studies, cultural studies, and media and communication studies.
This overview about publishing Indigenous literature in Australia from the mid-1990s to 2000 includes broader issues that writers need to consider such as engaging with readers and reviewers. Although changes have been made since 2000, the issues identified in this book remain current and to a large extent unresolved.
Organized into more than 200 thought- and action-provoking elements—from the importance of clean trucks and bathrooms to conversations with entrepreneurs creating new markets—Tom Peters, bestselling management guru offers a practical guide to impractical times. In The Pursuit of Wow!, Tom Peters offers readers the words, the tools, to survive in tumultuous business environments. In his groundbreaking book, In Search of Excellence changed the way business does business. Now it’s time to take the next leap into the cyberstage era. Getting to a place called excellence is no longer the idea. You’ve got to take that leap, then leap again—catapult their imaginations, blow their mindsets—in a word, wow! them. Once more the unconventional Peters stimulates corporate thought processes. Along with the best of his columns, Peters includes questions and rebuttals that come from readers and listeners, as well as his own candid responses. A must-read for every business person.
Following on from the successful He Iti te Kupu: Māori Metaphors and Similes, Hona Black’s new book explores the rich vein of humour in Māori life. Want to know how to call a silly person a ‘roro hipi / sheep’s brain’, or tell someone to get stuffed in te reo Māori? The answers are all in Te Reo Kapekape (literally, ‘the language of poking fun’), with more than 130 humorous and unique phrases in te reo and English that can be used to describe people, events and actions. The sayings are divided into four chapters — above the hip, below the hip, other phrases, and idioms. Using a cast of characters and dramatised dialogue, Hona explains each phrase and gives examples and suggestions for use — whether to tease, crack a joke or just add some flair to your daily use. This book is a valuable resource for anyone wanting to spice up their te reo or English with some fun and cheeky sayings, and will appeal to both language learners and fluent speakers of Māori.
Unit 1 News Report 看新聞學英語 Children Survive 40 Days in Amazon Jungle after Plane Crash 孩童在亞馬遜叢林墜機四十天後奇蹟生還 Unit 2 Fun Fact 趣味知識 Out of This World!—The Strange Lives of Astronauts 大開眼界──太空人的奇特生活 Unit 3 混合題型 The Inventor’s Tool Kit: Tesla’s Genius and Edison’s Practicality 發明家的對決:特斯拉的天賦與愛迪生的實用主義 CNN News Robots in Classrooms 教室裡的機器人 Unit 4 Travel 繞著地球玩 Istanbul: Where East Meets West 伊斯坦堡:東西方交會之地 Unit 5 Dialogue Focus 情境對話 Drugstore Necessities 圖解藥妝店商品 Shopping at a Drugstore 藥妝店購物英語 Unit 6 Mythology 神話故事 Legends in Lava: The Role of Volcanoes in Mythology 關於火山的神話故事 Unit 7 Reading Skill 讀門祕笈 Build Your Own Memory Palace 打造你的記憶宮殿 Unit 8 Food 美食知識 Everything You May Not Know about Greek Yogurt 你不知道的希臘優格趣聞 Unit 9 Writing 寫作練習 Translation Practice 翻譯寫作 Unit 10 Life 科技與生活 Is Digital Detoxing Possible in Our World Today? 數位排毒真的可能嗎? Unit 11 Plus Talk 會話百分百 Making and Receiving Phone Calls 撥接電話英語 1. Calling Emergency Services 撥打緊急電話 2. Calling Customer Service 聯絡客服 3. A Call from an Insurance Agent 保險代理人來電 4. Getting a Call about a Job Interview 接到工作面試邀約 Unit 12 People 人物側寫 Coldplay: The End of an Era 樂壇傳奇:酷玩樂團 Unit 13 History 歷史探究 War Correspondents: The Eyes and Ears of War 戰地記者:戰爭的見證者 Unit 14 Topic Writing主題式寫作 Priority Seats: Helpful or Harmful? 博愛座爭議
A tale of destiny and identity.Company solicitor of a multinational company but an inept father, Daniel van Dam has made grave mistakes in the education of his children, marriage after marriage. After he has moved to New Zealand,the question of whether we are here with a purpose, or like seeds in the wind, not knowing who we are and where we are going, keeps coming back to him. Sometimes he thinks he is close to finding the answer and then the idea fades away again and with it another illusion. That changes when Daniel van Dam becomes administrator of a Steiner School for poor black children in Kenya.
Sweet Pea is always losing her shoes. On Monday a family of ants carries her shoes outside and uses them as a canoe. On Tuesday a bird borrows them because his feet are cold. What happens on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday? Suggested level: junior.
A retelling of the Māori creation story in which the children of Rangi and Papa, tired of living in the dark, force their parents apart and allow light into Aotearoa. Matariki, gives factual information about the importance of it in Māori culture.