24 February 2020
Curriculum Report – Te Reo Māori
The focus for the curriculum of Māori within the school is to ensure that Te Reo and tikanga Māori are a regular part of the curriculum in all classrooms and to acknowledge the position of Tangata Whenua.
Within the school there are 2 different levels of expectations, those for children within Te Korowai o Te Aroha (Tūmanako and Manawanui) and those for children who are not.
Within the bi-lingual unit, children should be exposed to Te Reo for at least 31% of their day. This includes, but is not limited to: karakia, himene, whaikōrero, waiata, nga mahi whakarongo, pānui, tuhituhi, whakaatu, mātakitaki me te kōrero.
We are holding whole school karakia every morning which involves students participating in karakia, hīmene, mihimihi and waiata. As well as being a tikanga based programme it also allows us to practice our te reo in an authentic context.
Syndicates plan together to ensure te reo is used during daily programmes. Kupu o te ra, Phrases of the week are implemented as we'll.
A publication by the Ministry of Education is ‘He tātairanga reo Māori’ which enables teachers to place students at a particular level in terms of te reo use. We will be using this particularly in Te Korowai o Te Aroha, with an aim of implementing it school-wide. Within both bilingual classes non-formal assessment is taken in the form of observation and discussions. .
We have “tanga” cards as a behaviour management strategy. This recognises students who are showing that they can use one or more of our four values. They are values such as whanaungatanga, rangatiratanga, kaitiakitanga and manaakitanga. This has been another way to normalise te reo within the whole school context.
Currently, each teacher determines how much te reo is being used in each class. We have started to look at the Coherent Pathways document to ascertain where we are in terms of curriculum expectations. We would like to use this evaluate students capabilities and then decide how to best support teachers.
Some students in mainstream classes are at risk in terms of not having as many opportunities to use and learn te reo.
The teachers in Te Korowai o Te Aroha are using 'Te Aho Arataki Marau mo te Ako i Te Reo Māori – Kura Auraki'. This is a document which has curriculum guidelines for Teaching and Learning Te Reo Māori in English-medium schools. It provides specific achievement objectives which makes integrating Māori into the daily programme a lot easier. All teaching staff have copies of this document.
The children across the school participate in karakia, learn hīmene and waiata. We will also have a whole school noho marae week this term to practise our learning in an authentic context.
We have all students involved in noho marae each year. Part of this involves students practicing their pepeha and tikanga and ritual surrounding being on a marae.
This year we intend to do the following within Te Korowai o Te Aroha:
Continue to work on Te Korowai o Te Aroha vision
Continue to raise the profile of te reo by participating in the Te Ohonga o Ngapuhi in Term 3
Selecting units of work and contexts for learning with a Māori view
Visiting local Marae and Kohanga Reo
Implement assessment through ‘He Tātairanga Reo Māori’
All children in all classes are involved in regular Kapa Haka.
This year we intend to do the following within mainstream classes
Junior Syndicate are concentrating on a “weekly phrase” hoping to continue to increase the use of te reo Māori over time
Using Māori kupu in everyday routine and classroom programmes
Integrating of kupu Māori in Literacy/Numeracy programmes
Directions being used in te reo Māori
Encouraging children to greet in Māori and respond with an emotion
Kupu Māori on display in classrooms
Using “hui” to resolve issues
Utilising experts in Syndicates to support and learn from
Develop an evaluation document using the Coherent Pathways.