Whiua ki te ao, whiua ki te rangi, whiua ki ngā iwi katoa 🌐
Introducing the Wellbeing Hononga Index (WeHI) - a self-report measure of Māori wellbeing grounded in the Ngaruroro model of Māori wellbeing, and validated using a comprehensive 11-step R-based Psychometric protocol.
The instruction manual contains details related to:
• Disclaimers & Tikanga
• Whakapapa | Genealogy
• Development
• Response Scale
• Using and scoring the WeHI
• Example use
• List of long-form items
• List of short-form items
✨ Mānawatia a Matariki ✨
Humbled to kick off the Māori new year by sharing a kōrero I had with Dr. Sahir Hussain and Prateek S. on the Smooth Brain Society podcast 🧠
Tune in if you’re interested in issues and developments related to measuring Māori wellbeing 🌀
@FinleyNJohnson introduces 'Ngaruroro' a new model for Māori wellbeing. The project is led by @VicUniWgtn in collaboration with universities across Aotearoa
Website: https://t.co/SjcoALNVxi
Spotify: https://t.co/KHQJNueffk
Read the paper: https://t.co/ppp9GrEbxb
#Māori
Newsflash!
We've announced the recipients of the 2024 Fulbright NZ Graduate Awards!
Find out more here: https://t.co/fQEsYo2hyN
What would you do with a Fulbright?
Fantastic News! @FinleyNJohnson, our CACR PhD candidate, has won the Fulbright-Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga 2024 Graduate Award @FulbrightNZ. He will work with indigenous scholars and communities at @uhmanoa and @JohnsHopkins. Congratulations! https://t.co/md4X8kjNLQ
Kia ora e hoa mā,
It brings me great excitement to introduce the new ‘Ngaruroro’ model of Māori wellbeing 🌊
This is first article from my PhD thesis and has just been published by International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 🍃
https://t.co/pWXFzqA4JZ
@prof_suyeongkim@APA_Journals Kia ora @prof_suyeongkim!
Thank you so much for sharing this article 😊
This research was part of @FoxC101’s PhD thesis! I would highly recommend you check out the other awesome work being done by @FoxC101 and @TaylorJWinter.
Wishing you happy holidays from Aotearoa NZ 🇳🇿
@FinleyNJohnson and others validated their own self-report measure for the cultural embeddedness of Māori individuals and found its potential for informing future enculturation research for Māori and other Indigenous groups @APA_Journals
https://t.co/jRTHFiq5AJ
2nd best talk was awarded to Finley Johnson for their talk on biocultural approaches in conservation translocations. Finley is a PhD Student at Te Herenga Waka/University of Wellington