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Introduction to Waitangi

English • Year preschool • 60 • 12 students • Created with AI following Aligned with New Zealand Curriculum

English
lYear preschool
60
12 students
5 February 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 1 of 5 in the unit "Celebrating Waitangi Day". Lesson Title: Introduction to Waitangi Day Lesson Description: In this lesson, students will be introduced to the concept of Waitangi Day through storytelling. A simple story about the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi will be shared, using visuals and props to engage the children. Students will discuss what they think the story means and share their thoughts.

Introduction to Waitangi

Curriculum Area: Social Sciences (Te Whāriki - Belonging | Mana Whenua)

Age Group: Preschool (3-5 years)

Duration: 60 minutes
Class Size: 12 students


Learning Outcomes

By the end of this lesson, students will:

  • Recognise Waitangi Day as a special event in New Zealand.
  • Understand in a basic way that people made an agreement (Treaty of Waitangi) a long time ago.
  • Begin to explore the idea of working together and agreeing on rules.
  • Engage with storytelling through visuals and props.

Lesson Structure

1. Welcome and Settling In (10 minutes)

  • Greet the children using a mix of English and Te Reo Māori: “Morena, tamariki mā!” (Good morning, children!).
  • Sing a short waiata to settle the class, e.g., “Tēnā koutou” (Hello to you all).
  • Introduce the lesson theme: “Today we are going to learn about a special day in Aotearoa called Waitangi Day!”

2. Introduction to Waitangi (10 minutes)

  • Bring out a large New Zealand flag and ask: “Do you know what this is?”
  • Show a simple map of Aotearoa and point to Waitangi in Northland.
  • Briefly explain in child-friendly language: “A long time ago, Māori people and British people made a big promise to work together. It all happened in a place called Waitangi.”

3. Storytime – The Waitangi Story (15 minutes)

  • Tell the story of the Treaty of Waitangi using large illustrated cards or a felt board:
    • A waka arrives in Aotearoa.
    • Māori and British leaders meet.
    • They talk about making a promise (Treaty).
    • They sign it on a big piece of paper.
    • People did not always agree on what it meant, but today we remember it as Waitangi Day!
  • Use props: a feather as a quill (for signing), a rolled-up “Treaty” scroll, toy boats.
  • Encourage students to act out parts (pretending to shake hands, signing a pretend treaty).

4. Discussion – What Does It Mean? (10 minutes)

  • Ask simple questions:
    • “Why do we think people made a special promise?” (To be fair, to get along).
    • “Do we also make agreements today?” (Yes! Sharing toys, listening to teachers).
  • Relate it to classroom rules: “Just like the Treaty was an agreement, we have our own class agreements too!”

5. Hands-On Activity – Treaty of Our Classroom (10 minutes)

  • On a large butcher paper, write: “Our Class Treaty”.
  • Ask each child to contribute a kind rule, e.g., “Be kind”, “Share toys”.
  • Let children “sign” it with a handprint or crayon scribble.
  • Display in the classroom for reference during the unit.

6. Wrap-Up and Reflection (5 minutes)

  • Recap the key idea: “Waitangi Day is about an important promise. We make promises too!”
  • Sing “Ma is White” (a simple waiata with colours – linking to flags and unity).
  • Finish with karakia whakamutunga (closing prayer/blessing).

Resources Needed

✅ Large illustrated story cards or felt board pieces
✅ New Zealand flag
Map of Aotearoa (simple, clear)
Props (toy boats, feather quill, pretend treaty scroll)
Butcher paper & markers for the class treaty
✅ Paint or crayons for signing


Assessment & Observations

👀 Did children participate in storytelling and discussion?
🗣️ Could they share their idea of an agreement in simple terms?
🎨 Were they engaged in signing their classroom treaty?


Extension Activities (for the next lessons in the unit)

  • Lesson 2: Māori culture – kapa haka and traditional Māori greetings.
  • Lesson 3: Understanding fairness – role-playing sharing scenarios.
  • Lesson 4: Art – creating a collaborative class waka (canoe).
  • Lesson 5: Waitangi Day celebration – dress-up, singing, and a class hangi!

This highly interactive and age-appropriate lesson makes Waitangi Day accessible, meaningful, and engaging for preschool learners while fostering a sense of belonging (Mana Whenua). 🌿

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