Ngā Tini Whetū: Lessons Learnt

Ngā Tini Whetū is an innovative prototype using the Whānau Ora commissioning model to decentralise early support. AIKO, the evaluation provider, has worked with the four partners to develop an evaluation plan. The first step is the Lessons Learnt report.

Published: Friday, 20 August 2021 | Rāmere, 20 Hereturikōkā, 2021

Background

Ngā Tini Whetū is being implemented across Te Ika a Maui by Te Puni Kōkiri, Oranga Tamariki and ACC, in partnership with Te Pou Matakana, the Whānau Ora Commissioning Agency (WOCA).

Ngā Tini Whetū enables more whānau to access early support tailored to their needs. This innovative prototype shows how government agencies and Crown entities can collaborate with kaupapa Māori organisations to support whānau.

The final evaluation report is expected late in 2022.

Key findings

The report highlights several positive findings, including:

  • the public service is maturing in how it supports and embeds Whānau Ora
  • Ministerial leadership was instrumental for getting the prototype underway
  • Crown and Māori are sharing common goals and aspirations for tamariki and whānau
  • the Whānau Ora Commissioning Agency successfully challenged agencies to better understand how to partner with a Māori commissioning agency
  • senior leaders are championing collaboration between agencies.

The report also found opportunities for further strengthening and exploration as the prototype continues, including:

  • agencies need to identify how to build experience, capability and evidence to support Whānau Ora and other forms of collaborative working across government
  • while more work is needed to embed collaborative ways of working, what has been completed is unique, innovative and courageous
  • there is also an opportunity to explore how innovative funding can support future Māori-Crown and Iwi-Crown partnerships and facilitate cross agency resourcing.

Research files

Ngā Tini Whetū | Lessons Learnt: report [PDF 468KB]

Report prepared for Whānau Ora Commissioning Agency, Te Puni Kōkiri, Oranga Tamariki and ACC. An evaluation report on early findings from the prototype.