Unit #4: Kaitiakitanga in Action
Lesson 4 of 5: Sustainable Practices: Learning from Ngāti Kahungunu
Duration: 60 Minutes
Year Level: Year 8
Class Size: 30 Students
Curriculum Area: Aotearoa New Zealand Histories, Social Sciences — Te Takanga o Te Wā
Curriculum Level: Level 4
Ākonga Learning Outcome:
By the end of this lesson, students will:
- Describe specific sustainable environmental practices used by Ngāti Kahungunu, particularly in the Hawke’s Bay region.
- Understand how traditional Māori knowledge and values such as kaitiakitanga have guided resource management.
- Apply comparisons between traditional and contemporary sustainability practices through group discussion and collaborative inquiry.
Key Concepts from the NCEA Learning Matrix:
- Big Idea: Māori history is fundamental to New Zealand’s history.
- Significant Learning: I can explore how Māori values like kaitiakitanga shape decision-making.
- Mātauranga Māori Integration: Explore traditional practices and beliefs such as rāhui, seasonal harvesting, and river guardianship (tangata tiaki).
Resources Needed:
- Printed fact sheets (Ngāti Kahungunu sustainable practices – supplied by teacher or school)
- Large iwi map of Hawke’s Bay with marked rivers, forests, and coastline
- Whiteboards or A3 paper for group brainstorming
- Felt pens, sticky notes
- Video clip (4 min): Oral accounts from Ngāti Kahungunu kaumātua discussing eel (tuna) harvesting practices – pre-filmed and locally sourced
- Laminated image cards showing tūpuna tools/methods (hīnaki, patu ika, etc.)
- Template sheet: "Past, Present, Future Sustainability"
Lesson Outline:
🔹 1. Karakia & Whanaungatanga (5 minutes)
Begin the lesson with a short karakia timatanga to ground learning with cultural integrity. Follow with a brief mihi and check-in — “What is one thing you’ve shared with your whānau about this unit so far?”
🔹 2. Introduction & Warming Up Prior Knowledge (10 minutes)
Purpose: Connect with previous lessons about kaitiakitanga and Māori relationships to land and water.
- On the board, write: “What does sustainability mean to Ngāti Kahungunu?”
- Students do a rapid Think-Pair-Share.
- Ask: Have you or your whānau ever been part of a rāhui? Why would it be put in place?
- Use the iwi map to visually locate key Ngāti Kahungunu areas in Hawke’s Bay and explain how iwi boundaries affect resource use.
🔹 3. Mātau o Mua – Exploring Traditional Practices (15 minutes)
Purpose: Students learn about three traditional sustainable practices of Ngāti Kahungunu.
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Watch a 4-minute video clip of a kaumātua explaining tuna (eel) harvesting methods and the reasons for seasonal limits.
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Students split into six groups (5 per group).
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Each group receives a different sustainable practice card. Examples:
- Seasonal fishing (tuna, inanga)
- Use of traditional fishing tools (hīnaki, kupenga)
- Harvesting of harakeke for weaving
- Māra kūmara with lunar cycles
- Use of rongoā (medicinal plants)
- Forest management without felling sacred trees
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Groups read the card, answer on mini whiteboards:
- What was the practice?
- Why was it sustainable?
- Would it still be useful today?
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Each group shares one fascinating fact with class — teacher makes a chart of recurring values/themes: kaitiakitanga, mauri, tapu, mana whenua.
🔹 4. Hands-on Comparison Activity: Past – Present – Future (15 minutes)
Purpose: Think critically about how Ngāti Kahungunu practices relate to current environmental issues.
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Each student receives a "Past–Present–Future Sustainability" worksheet.
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Column A: Write one traditional Ngāti Kahungunu practice they investigated.
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Column B: Fill in a modern equivalent (e.g., DOC fishing quotas, environmental protections).
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Column C: Imagine a future solution that blends Māori and Western ideas (e.g., app that tracks harvest limits based on lunar cycles and rāhui alerts).
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Circulate and scaffold students who may struggle with futuristic thinking — encourage imagination and relevance to their rohe.
🔹 5. Ako Panel – Collaborative Circle Chat (10 minutes)
Purpose: Deepen dialogue and encourage voice.
Teacher acts as facilitator but allows for mostly student-led discussion.
🔹 6. Reflective Wrap Up & Exit Ticket (5 minutes)
Purpose: Consolidate understanding & encourage personal relevance.
Prompt on board: “Which Ngāti Kahungunu practice would YOU bring back today — and why?”
- Students write their answers on sticky notes and post them on the class Ngāti Kahungunu Kaitiaki Wall.
- End with a short karakia whakamutunga.
Assessment for Learning:
- Observational notes during group work and hākari kōrero to identify engagement, critical thinking, and cultural understanding.
- Student “Past–Present–Future” worksheet can be used for formative assessment (highlight individuals requiring extension or support).
- Sticky note reflections provide insight into individual connection and understanding.
Extension/Kaiārahi Ideas (Optional):
- Invite a local iwi representative or kaumātua to speak to the class during next session.
- Visit a local wetland or marae-based māra to explore sustainable practices on-site.
- Create a digital mural of practices using student-designed icons representing mauri, taputapu, and other key concepts.
Teacher Note:
This lesson seeks to centre mātauranga Māori and uphold the historical integrity of Ngāti Kahungunu while offering students a future-facing, innovative lens for sustainability. Use it as an opportunity to foster localised curriculum connections and strengthen ties with whānau, hapū, and iwi in your region. Ka rawe!