A Maori University in New Zealand Tries to Cope With Rapid Growth. Cohen, D. The Chronicle of Higher Education, 49(46):A.34, 2003. 1
A Maori University in New Zealand Tries to Cope With Rapid Growth [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
Although enthusiasm for learning the native language pervades Australia's eight public universities and other such institutions, interest is strongest at the 10-campus Te Wananga o Aotearoa, New Zealand's only explicitly Maori institution of higher learning. The college, which is accredited by the New Zealand Quality Authority, a government agency, is unusual by many international benchmarks and has its headquarters here in this leafy little North Island township.
@article{cohen_maori_2003,
	title = {A {Maori} {University} in {New} {Zealand} {Tries} to {Cope} {With} {Rapid} {Growth}},
	volume = {49},
	issn = {0009-5982},
	url = {https://business.highbeam.com/434953/article-1G1-147118341/maori-university-new-zealand-tries-cope-rapid-growth},
	abstract = {Although enthusiasm for learning the native language pervades Australia's eight public universities and other such institutions, interest is strongest at the 10-campus Te Wananga o Aotearoa, New Zealand's only explicitly Maori institution of higher learning. The college, which is accredited by the New Zealand Quality Authority, a government agency, is unusual by many international benchmarks and has its headquarters here in this leafy little North Island township.},
	language = {eng},
	number = {46},
	journal = {The Chronicle of Higher Education},
	author = {Cohen, David},
	year = {2003},
	note = {1},
	keywords = {Australia, Colleges \& Universities, Higher Education, Indigenous People, Language},
	pages = {A.34},
}

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