NZ History • Year 13 • 60 • 30 students • Created with AI following Aligned with New Zealand Curriculum
I want the plan to focus on taking practical action to give effect to te Tiriti o Waitangi without explicitly mentioning te Tiriti o Waitangi and how that looks and what does that mean across all the learning areas of NZC by collaboratively creating a series of team agreements or values that reflect principles of partnership, respect, and guardianship. These agreements are drafted and refined in small groups, encouraging discussion about their meaning and how they can guide interactions and decision-making in the curriculum assessment and change programme.
Aotearoa New Zealand Histories
Learning Area: Social Sciences
Curriculum Level: Level 8
Year Level: Year 13
Assessment Context: This is a preparatory learning experience focused on the "Understand" and "Do" strands in the Aotearoa New Zealand’s Histories curriculum. This lesson contributes toward internal assessment by developing key historical thinking and collaboration skills relevant to curriculum change and critical inquiry.
60 minutes
Students will collaboratively create team agreements that give practical effect to values such as partnership, respect, and guardianship—without overtly naming te Tiriti o Waitangi—while exploring how these values guide meaningful curriculum and assessment change across learning contexts.
By the end of the lesson, students will:
Place A3 cards and materials at four workstations. Include on each station:
Display the Learning Intention and Success Criteria at the front of the class.
Activity: Karakia + Unpacking the Purpose
Teacher Role: Facilitate and frame the importance of collective responsibility and honouring diverse contributions within a values-based kaupapa. Ask:
“What does it mean to truly co-create learning experiences where everyone feels heard, respected, and involved?”
Activity: Collaborative Interpretation of Māori Wisdom
Teacher Role: Float through groups as a facilitator — listen carefully for students making links between abstract values and familiar classroom or curriculum experiences. Reframe complex ideas if needed.
Activity: Value Agreement Prototypes
Teacher Role: Prompt depth:
“What might this agreement look like during a group project? During a tough assessment week? In a Science class? In PE?”
Activity: Dot Voting + Refinement
Teacher Role: Encourage groups to consider:
Which agreements seem doable, powerful, and respectful of multiple worldviews?
Activity: Circle of Commitment
“Would we be willing to use these values as part of how we make decisions about learning and change this year?”
Optional: Photograph final A3 sheets for a display titled:
🛠️ He Mahere Waka – Our Agreement as Navigators
("He Mahere Waka" = A map/plan for our canoe journey — a metaphor for unified direction)
As this lesson indirectly centres enduring values underlying te Tiriti (without direct reference), it sensitively builds ākonga ability to engage in changemaking aligned with equitable and bicultural learning futures. Use this as a launching pad for long-term projects where students act as agents of curriculum influence—and ensure their values remain visible throughout the journey.
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