Ngā Tikanga o Te Kura Mātua
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Ngā Tikanga o Te Kura Mātua
School Expectations for Our Tamariki Te Marautanga o Aotearoa Year 3-4 Māori Bilingual Unit
Te Tae Mai o te Tamaiti ki te Kura
Tamariki arrive ready to learn at 8:30am Whānau walk tamariki to their classroom door Morning karakia begins our learning day Positive mindset and aroha for learning
He Whakatakoto: Setting Up for Success
What does your child need each morning? Kete or school bag with books Healthy kai for brain power Positive whakapapa stories from home
Kōrero Māori i te Kāinga
Te reo Māori is the heart of our learning Even simple kupu help tamariki succeed Whānau support strengthens our kaupapa Practice makes our reo grow strong
Ngā Kupu Māori mō te Kāinga
{"left":"Kia ora - Hello/Thank you\nHaere mai - Welcome\nKia pai - Be good/Take care\nAroha - Love","right":"Kai - Food\nWai - Water\nMoe - Sleep\nKōrero - Talk/Speak"}
Ngā Kākahu o te Kura
School uniform shows our unity and pride Clean, tidy appearance reflects mana Comfortable clothing helps focus on learning Special cultural dress for important occasions
He Pātai: What Makes Good School Kākahu?
Think about your tamaiti getting dressed for school What helps them feel confident and ready? How can we balance uniform rules with cultural identity?
Whānau Correspondence from Te Kura
School newsletters keep whānau informed Permission slips need prompt return Teacher emails about your tamaiti's progress Important dates for cultural events
Whakatōhea: Setting Up Your Learning Space
What should go on our classroom walls? Māori alphabet and numbers Whakataukī for inspiration Student artwork and achievements Cultural calendar and important dates
Whakataukī
Ko te tamaiti te pūtake o te kaupapa The child is the heart of the matter Everything we do is for our tamariki