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Waitangi Origins

NZ History • Year 8 • 60 • 28 students • Created with AI following Aligned with New Zealand Curriculum

NZ History
8Year 8
60
28 students
16 February 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 1 of 4 in the unit "Understanding Waitangi Day". Lesson Title: Introduction to Waitangi Day Lesson Description: Students will explore the origins of Waitangi Day, including the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840. They will discuss the significance of the treaty and its impact on New Zealand's history, setting the stage for deeper exploration in subsequent lessons.

Waitangi Origins

Curriculum Area

  • Subject: New Zealand History
  • Curriculum Level: Level 4 (Years 7–8)
  • Strand: Social Sciences – Aotearoa New Zealand Histories

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, students will:

  1. Understand the historical context of the Treaty of Waitangi.
  2. Explore why Waitangi Day is significant to New Zealanders today.
  3. Identify key individuals and groups involved in the signing of the Treaty.
  4. Begin forming critical thoughts about differing perspectives on the Treaty.

Lesson Structure (60 Minutes)

1. Warm-Up Activity – Think, Pair, Share (10 minutes)

Purpose: Activate prior knowledge and encourage discussion.

  1. Think (2 min): Students write down everything they know about Waitangi Day on sticky notes or in their notebooks.
  2. Pair (3 min): They discuss their ideas with a partner and compare thoughts.
  3. Share (5 min): As a class, groups share key points. The teacher records responses on the board under the headings "What we know" and "Questions we have".

2. Historical Timeline Activity (15 minutes)

Purpose: Build chronological understanding of key Treaty events.

  • Teacher Explanation (5 min): The teacher gives a short talk on what led to the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi (e.g., European exploration, Māori trade, British interest in governance). Engage students by posing questions like, "Why do you think Māori may have wanted a treaty?"
  • Group Work (10 min):
    • Divide students into seven groups (each representing a key pre-1840 event, such as James Cook’s arrival, early Māori-European interactions, the Declaration of Independence 1835, etc.).
    • Each group receives a short passage summarising their event.
    • They summarise it in a one-sentence explanation and present it to the class in chronological order to build a class timeline.

3. Primary Source Investigation (15 minutes)

Purpose: Develop historical thinking skills by analysing sources.

  • Teacher Demonstration (5 min): Display a copy of the Treaty of Waitangi (English and Māori versions). Highlight differences and discuss potential misunderstandings by posing questions like:
    • "How might different interpretations lead to conflicts?"
    • "What challenges do multiple translations present?"
  • Student Exploration (10 min):
    • Split students into four groups and provide each group with one statement from the Treaty (both English and Māori versions).
    • Groups must answer: “What does this mean?” and “Could this statement be understood differently by Māori and English speakers?”
    • Groups quickly share findings.

4. Class Discussion – Why Does Waitangi Matter? (15 minutes)

  • Teacher Questioning (5 min): Ask students: "Why do you think we still celebrate and debate Waitangi Day today?"
  • Small-Group Discussion (5 min): Students discuss in groups whether they think the Treaty was fair at the time for both Māori and the British.
  • Quick Fire Debate (5 min): Select two students at a time (one supporting the Treaty as a positive agreement, one as a problematic document). Encourage respectful discussion.

Wrap-Up and Reflection (5 minutes)

  • Students write one sentence completing: "Today I learned that Waitangi Day is important because…"
  • Collect responses for future lessons.
  • Preview Next Lesson: Next time, we will explore what happened after the Treaty was signed and how it shaped New Zealand.

Assessment & Differentiation

  • Formative Assessment: Teacher observes class discussions & sticky note responses.
  • Differentiation:
    • Provide visual prompts for ELL students.
    • Extend stronger students by asking them to research a historical figure involved in the Treaty.

Resources Needed

✅ Printouts of Treaty excerpts
✅ Writing materials
✅ Whiteboard & sticky notes


This lesson isn’t just about learning history—it’s about making history feel real, engaging, and thought-provoking for Year 8 students. By using interactive group work, debates, and primary sources, we ensure each student connects personally to New Zealand’s past and its ongoing impact today. 🚀

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