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Understanding Te Tiriti

NZ History • Year 7 • 60 • 30 students • Created with AI following Aligned with New Zealand Curriculum

NZ History
7Year 7
60
30 students
6 February 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 1 of 12 in the unit "Understanding Te Tiriti o Waitangi". Lesson Title: Introduction to Te Tiriti o Waitangi Lesson Description: Students will explore the historical context of Te Tiriti o Waitangi, discussing its significance as Aotearoa's foundational document. They will engage in a group discussion to share prior knowledge and misconceptions.

Understanding Te Tiriti

Curriculum Area: Social Sciences (Level 4)

Achievement Objective:

  • Understand how people’s perspectives on past events in Aotearoa shape the present.
  • Analyse how leadership, decision-making, and power influenced relationships in early Aotearoa New Zealand.

Lesson Duration: 60 minutes

Unit: Understanding Te Tiriti o Waitangi (Lesson 1 of 12)
Year Group: Year 7
Class Size: 30 students


Lesson Outcomes

By the end of this lesson, students will:
✅ Identify key events leading up to Te Tiriti o Waitangi.
✅ Discuss why perspectives on Te Tiriti differ.
✅ Share and correct misconceptions through guided discussion.


Lesson Breakdown

1. Whakawhanaungatanga – Building Connections (10 minutes)

📍 Objective: Establish a personal connection to the learning

  • Begin with a whole-class discussion: What do you know about Te Tiriti o Waitangi?
  • Write students’ responses on the board under two headings: Facts and Misconceptions.
  • Encourage students to think about prior learning in primary school and family or community discussions.

👥 Activity: Think-Pair-Share

  1. Ask students: Why do you think some people might see Te Tiriti differently?
  2. In pairs, students discuss their thoughts before sharing with the class.

Teacher’s Role: Guide students to recognise that perspectives differ based on experiences, historical context, and cultural views.


2. Setting the Scene – 1840 Aotearoa (15 minutes)

📍 Objective: Provide historical context of Te Tiriti o Waitangi

  • Storytelling Approach:
    • Use an engaging visual like a hand-drawn map or digital slideshow showing Aotearoa in the early 1800s.
    • Describe the relationships between Māori rangatira, British settlers, missionaries, and traders.
    • Introduce key figures like Hone Heke, Governor William Hobson, and British officials.
    • Explain why some rangatira wanted a treaty and others were hesitant.

🎭 Mini-Drama: Role Play – Voices from the Past

  • Materials: Pre-prepared short quotes from Māori chiefs, British officials, settlers, and missionaries.
  • Activity:
    • Hand out different quotes to students.
    • Students stand in a line representing different viewpoints and read their quotes aloud.
    • Short teacher-led discussion: What do you notice about the differences in opinions?

Teacher’s Role: Facilitate discussion to highlight how complex the decisions were for both Māori and the British Crown.


3. Te Tiriti vs The Treaty (15 minutes)

📍 Objective: Recognise key differences in texts and their impact

  • Brief Explanation:
    • Te Tiriti o Waitangi was written in te reo Māori and The Treaty of Waitangi was the English version.
    • Many words didn’t translate exactly, leading to confusion and challenges in later years.

📝 Small Group Activity: Translations Matter

  • Instructions:
    • Give each group an English phrase and ask them to rewrite it in their own words.
    • Rotate phrases between groups to see how meanings shift with retellings.
    • Relate this to the differing understandings of the Treaty.

Teacher’s Role: Emphasise that mistranslation caused disagreements that continue today.


4. Exit Ticket – Quickfire Reflection (10 minutes)

📍 Objective: Assess student understanding and gather insights for next lesson

🚦 Traffic Light Reflection:

  • Give each student a sticky note.
  • Write one thing they learned (green), one thing they are unsure about (yellow), and one question they have (red).
  • Stick notes on the board before leaving.

📢 Share a few reflections aloud to engage student thinking and highlight key ideas for the next lesson.


Teacher Reflection and Next Steps

✅ Which misconceptions need deeper exploration?
✅ Were students able to grasp differing perspectives?
✅ Review exit tickets to inform next lesson on the motivations behind Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

Next Lesson: Who Wanted the Treaty and Why?

This lesson ensures Year 7 students actively engage with the history of Te Tiriti o Waitangi in a way that is age-appropriate, interactive, and based on critical thinking.

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