Hero background

Growing Good Whānau

Health • Year 5 • 60 • 25 students • Created with AI following Aligned with New Zealand Curriculum

Health
5Year 5
60
25 students
4 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 1 of 5 in the unit "Playground Rights Exploration". Lesson Title: Introduction to Playground Rights Lesson Description: Students will explore the concept of rights and discuss what it means to have rights during playtime. They will engage in a group discussion to identify their own rights on the playground and why these rights are important for a safe and enjoyable play environment.

Growing Good Whānau

Health Lesson Plan – Year 5

Unit Title: Playground Rights Exploration
Lesson: 1 of 5
Lesson Title: Introduction to Playground Rights
Time: 60 minutes
Class size: 25 students
Curriculum Area: Health and Physical Education – Level 3, Strand D: Healthy Communities and Environments
Christian Worldview Integration: Recognising each other as taonga (treasures), created in the image of God, worthy of dignity, care, and respect during times of play.


WALT (We Are Learning To)

  • Understand what “rights” mean in the context of playground play.
  • Recognise that all children have the right to feel safe, included, and respected during play.
  • Begin to explore how God calls us to care for one another in every space, including the playground.

Success Criteria

Students will be able to:

  • Clearly explain what “rights” on the playground may look like.
  • Share one example of how they can respect others’ rights during playtime.
  • Work collaboratively and contribute to group discussions.
  • Begin using Te Reo Māori to describe feelings and rights (e.g. tika, manaakitanga, haumaru).

Resources

  • Large sheets of butchers’ paper
  • Markers, coloured pencils
  • Printed dyslexia-friendly reading strips on rights (OpenDyslexic font)
  • Playground Rights Image cards
  • Bible verse poster: “So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you.” – Matthew 7:12
  • Classroom values poster (including manaakitanga and aroha)

Key Vocabulary

  • Rights
  • Responsibilities
  • Respect
  • Safe / Haumaru
  • Kindness / Aroha
  • Inclusion / Kotahitanga

Lesson Sequence (60 minutes total)

1. Karakia and Welcome – 5 minutes

Begin with a karakia timatanga (opening prayer), focusing on God’s desire for peace, fairness and care among tamariki. Welcome students and share the day's WALT.

Karakia example:
E te Atua, whakarongo mai ki ā mātou karakia. Awhinatia mātou ki te kitea he ara tika e noho tahi ai mātou i te pai me te aroha i te papa tākaro. Āmine.


2. Circle Time: What Are Rights? – 10 minutes

Purpose: Build shared understanding of “rights”.

  • Sit in a circle and use a talking stick (use a taonga or soft ball). Ask:
    ❓ “What do you think the word ‘rights’ means?”
    ❓ “Why might we have rights on the playground?”
    🟡 Use a simple metaphor, e.g. “Rights are like a kete we carry. They keep us safe, happy and strong.”
  • Use sentence starters to guide students who need extra help:
    • “A right is when I can…”
    • “I feel safe when…”

Differentiation Strategy:
Use illustrated “rights” cards with dyslexia-friendly font and symbols for ESOL and neurodiverse learners (e.g. an image of a child sitting with a friend = inclusion).


3. Read-Aloud: "Tīma Tākaro – Our Playground Whānau" – 10 minutes

Resource: Create a short, teacher-written narrative or reader about a group of diverse tamariki playing on the playground and noticing how things feel when people do/don’t respect their rights.

Include characters with different needs (e.g. a wheelchair user, a shy child, a very active child).

Extension opportunity: Advanced readers can read dialogue aloud with expression and reflect on the consequences of positive and negative actions.

Guiding Questions:
🟤 “How did the characters show respect?”
🟤 “What rights were protected or ignored?”
🟤 "What would Jesus say about how we treat each other on the playground?"


4. Group Jigsaw Activity: Mapping Our Rights – 20 minutes

Purpose: Collaboratively identify and map out key playground rights.

Instructions:

  • Divide class into five groups of five students.
  • Each group gets:
    • Butchers’ paper
    • Markers
    • A “Playground Right” from a set (e.g. Right to feel safe / Right to be included / Right to speak up / Right to be yourself / Right to play fair).
  • Groups draw images, write examples, and translate key words into Te Reo Māori.
  • Use sentence scaffolds displayed on the board:
    • “A right we have is…”
    • “We can protect this right by…”

Supports for Diverse Learners:

  • Provide visual cues for neurodiverse learners.
  • Use peer support: One student reads while another draws.
  • Supply native language picture cards for ELL students as needed.

5. Whole-Class Hui: Share Our Rights Posters – 10 minutes

Groups present their posters to the class. While presenting, groups must:

  • Say the right in English & Te Reo Māori (e.g. "Right to be safe – Te tika kia haumaru ai.")
  • Share one scenario when this right is important.

Celebrate how each group showed manaakitanga (care) and kotahitanga (unity). Connect this time to God’s design for respectful community.


6. Closing Reflection and Connection to Scripture – 5 minutes

  • Refer to the Bible poster: “Do to others what you would have them do to you” – Matthew 7:12.
  • Ask:
    • “How did we treat others like we would like to be treated today?”
    • “How does God feel when we respect each other’s rights?”
  • Close with a short prayer of thanks.

“E te Atua, he taonga mātou katoa. Āwhinatia mātou ki te manaaki i ō mātou hoa, i te papa tākaro me ngā wā katoa. Āmine.”


Differentiation & Support Strategies

  • Dyslexia Support: Use OpenDyslexic font for all printed resources
  • ESOL Learners: Use visuals and bilingual labels
  • Neurodiverse Learners: Choice in expression (e.g., drawing vs speaking) and access to peer or teacher support
  • Christian Worldview: Highlight how God’s love and justice inspire our treatment of others, even at play

Extension Activities

  • 🤔 Deep Thinkers Journal Prompt: “What would a playground with no kindness or rights feel like? What would you do about it?”
  • 🎭 Roleplay Option: Create short skits where characters demonstrate rights being upheld or ignored. Encourage student-led scenarios.
  • 🧠 Challenge Words: Explore more Te Reo Māori terms like whakarongo (listen), whakaute (respect), and tautoko (support).

Te Ao Māori Integration

  • Use Te Reo Māori consistently throughout the lesson, including greetings, key vocabulary, and karakia.
  • Embed whanaungatanga, manaakitanga, and kotahitanga concepts in discussions about community and play.
  • Encourage tamariki to see themselves as guardians (kaitiaki) of the playground environment.

This lesson helps build a strong foundation in values-based health education through the lens of both the NZ Curriculum and a Christian worldview — integrating manaakitanga, whanaungatanga, and God's call to love our neighbours.

Create Your Own AI Lesson Plan

Join thousands of teachers using Kuraplan AI to create personalized lesson plans that align with Aligned with New Zealand Curriculum in minutes, not hours.

AI-powered lesson creation
Curriculum-aligned content
Ready in minutes

Created with Kuraplan AI

🌟 Trusted by 1000+ Schools

Join educators across New Zealand