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Kai and Culture

Technology • Year 11 • 50 • 25 students • Created with AI following Aligned with New Zealand Curriculum

Technology
1Year 11
50
25 students
6 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

Aligned with the Health and Physical Education curriculum (strand: Personal Health and Physical Development) and Food Technology/Home Economics strands focusing on food choices, cultural practices, and wellbeing.

Kai and Culture

Overview

Curriculum Area:

  • Technology – Food Technology (Materials and Processing Technology)
  • Integrated with Health & Physical Education (Strand: Personal Health and Physical Development)
  • NZ Curriculum Level: Level 6 (typically Year 11)

Key Focus:
Understanding how cultural practices influence food choices and how these choices impact personal wellbeing. This lesson supports students in developing critical awareness of the social, cultural, and ethical dimensions of food design and production in a New Zealand context.

Time: 50 minutes
Class Size: 25 students
Teaching Approach: Collaborative, inquiry-based, culturally responsive and student-led exploration


Learning Intentions

By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:

  • Describe how personal, cultural, and societal influences shape food choices in Aotearoa New Zealand.
  • Connect specific food practices to wellbeing and cultural identity.
  • Explain how food design in New Zealand incorporates cultural values and supports positive health outcomes.
  • Reflect on their own food choices in relation to cultural identity and wellbeing.

Key Competencies

  • Thinking: Critically evaluating assumptions around cultural food practices.
  • Relating to others: Valuing diverse perspectives in food traditions.
  • Using language, symbols, and texts: Interpreting food design decisions across cultures.
  • Participating and contributing: Sharing ideas and collaborating in group contexts.
  • Managing self: Independent reflection and connection to personal values and habits.

Resources Needed

  • Chart paper / whiteboards
  • Post-it notes
  • Printed “Kai & Culture Cards” – each card contains a brief description of a traditional food and its cultural significance (e.g., boil-up, hāngī, umu, raw fish)
  • Markers / pens
  • Wellbeing Wheel handouts (used for evaluating holistic wellbeing: taha tinana, taha wairua, taha whānau, taha hinengaro)
  • Small printed food pyramid adapted for bicultural context
  • Devices (optional, for student reflection at end via Google Docs or learning journal)

Lesson Breakdown

🔹 Warm-Up: 'Food & Identity' Icebreaker (5 minutes)

Purpose: Set a culturally safe and inclusive tone. Acknowledge the diverse backgrounds of students.

Activity:
Students pair up and briefly explain one food that reminds them of home or whānau. Each pair then shares ONE example back to the group. Record examples on board under the theme “Kai that connects us”.

Prompt: “If you could share one meal with your ancestors, what would it be and why?”


🔹 Group Inquiry: Kai & Culture Carousel (20 minutes)

Purpose: Deepen understanding of food practices and wellbeing links across cultures.

Set-Up: Create four ‘stations’ based on different groups within Aotearoa:

  1. Māori kai (e.g., hāngī)
  2. Pasifika kai (e.g., taro, raw fish)
  3. Asian kai (e.g., dumplings, curry)
  4. Pākehā/European traditions (e.g., fish and chips, Sunday roast)

Instructions:

  • Students rotate tables in groups of ~6.

  • At each station, students read "Kai & Culture Cards" and answer two prompts listed on a flipchart:

    • What values and traditions are reflected in this food?
    • How might this kai promote or challenge hauora (holistic wellbeing)?
  • Groups write key ideas on ‘station paper’ to leave for the next group.

Tip: Refocus group rotating every 5 minutes to stay on track. Use gentle music or a bell as the time cue.


🔹 Whole-Class Debrief: 'Kai and Identity' Wall (10 minutes)

Purpose: Synthesise cultural insights and make connections to identity and health.

Activity:
Using post-it notes, each student writes:

  • One way a cultural food can enhance wellbeing
  • One way food can challenge wellbeing (e.g., processed versions of cultural food due to cost or appropriation)

Stick all responses on a board titled “Kai and Identity – Whakaaro Wall”. Facilitate a discussion by grouping responses under the four dimensions of hauora.

Prompt: “How can valuing cultural kai help us feel well – in body, mind, soul, and community?”


🔹 Individual Reflection: Food & Me (10 minutes)

Purpose: Encourage metacognitive growth and personal relevance.

Task: Students complete a half-page written reflection in their journal or device.

Reflection prompts:

  • How do your personal or family food habits reflect culture or identity?
  • How do these habits affect your wellbeing?
  • Will anything change about how you think about food after today?

Students can share with whānau as a discussion starter at home.


Assessment For Learning

  • Observation of group discussions and contributions on station sheets
  • Reflection responses indicate critical thinking and self-awareness
  • Teacher questions during debrief align with the Level 6 progression indicators for Technology and Health

Extension Opportunities

  • Design a culturally inclusive school menu or lunchbox with health and identity in mind
  • Invite local whānau or community members to share a kai-making session
  • Research and present a historical food journey of a culture in Aotearoa

Reflection and Next Steps (Teacher Focus)

  • Were students able to connect kai to cultural values and wellbeing?
  • Which students displayed deeper understanding or unique interpretations?
  • Would any students benefit from follow-up one-on-ones about food insecurity or wellbeing concerns?
  • Plan next lesson: prototyping recipes that honour culture and promote health

Final Notes

This lesson aligns with the Technology Learning Area expectations around understanding how social and cultural factors influence food product design. It appropriately connects with Health and Physical Education strands, encouraging student identity exploration, critical health thinking, and ethical food understanding – a uniquely Aotearoa approach.

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