🧺 Te Kete Ako

Colonization Perspectives — Multiple Views of History

Colonization Perspectives — Multiple Views of History · Years 7–10

Year LevelYears 7–10
TypeStudent handout — classroom resource

Ngā Whāinga Akoranga · Learning Intentions

  • Investigate a significant question using evidence from multiple sources
  • Analyse and evaluate information to form and support a reasoned position
  • Connect learning to real-world contexts, including Aotearoa New Zealand settings
  • Communicate understanding clearly and accurately for a specific audience

Paearu Angitu · Success Criteria

  • I use at least two sources and can evaluate their credibility
  • My position is clearly stated and supported by specific evidence
  • I can connect my learning to at least one real-world Aotearoa context
  • My communication is clear, organised, and appropriate for the audience
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📜 Colonization Perspectives

Ngā Tirohanga Rerekē — Understanding Multiple Viewpoints

🔍 Why Multiple Perspectives Matter

History is told by people — and people have different experiences and viewpoints. Understanding multiple perspectives helps us see the full picture of events like colonization in Aotearoa.

This doesn't mean all perspectives are equally valid, but understanding them helps us think critically about the past and its impacts today.

📅 Key Events

~1250-1300

Polynesian ancestors of Māori arrive in Aotearoa

1642

Abel Tasman — first European contact (briefly)

1769

James Cook arrives; ongoing European contact begins

1840

Te Tiriti o Waitangi signed by Māori chiefs and British Crown

1860s

New Zealand Wars; large-scale land confiscations

1867

Native Schools Act — te reo banned in schools

1975

Waitangi Tribunal established to address Treaty breaches

Different Perspectives on Colonization

🌿 Māori Perspectives

Many Māori view colonization as:

  • Dispossession — Land taken through confiscation, unjust sales, and legislation
  • Cultural suppression — Te reo, tikanga, and practices actively undermined
  • Treaty breaches — Promises made in Te Tiriti not honored by the Crown
  • Intergenerational trauma — Ongoing impacts on health, wealth, and wellbeing
  • Resistance and resilience — Continued fight for rights and sovereignty

🏠 Settler Perspectives (Historical)

Many settlers at the time believed:

  • They were "civilizing" the land and people
  • European ways were superior (racist ideology)
  • The Treaty gave British sovereignty
  • They were building a better future
  • Land purchases were legitimate

Note: These views are now widely recognized as racist and inaccurate.

📚 Modern Historical Understanding

Contemporary historians generally agree:

  • Colonization caused significant harm to Māori
  • Treaty breaches occurred and need to be addressed
  • Māori and settler experiences were very different
  • Ongoing reconciliation and justice is needed
  • NZ history should be taught accurately

📜 The Treaty: Two Versions

A Key Source of Conflict

Te Tiriti o Waitangi (Māori version) and the Treaty of Waitangi (English version) say different things:

  • Sovereignty (Article 1): Māori version says "kāwanatanga" (governance), English says "sovereignty"
  • Rights (Article 2): Māori version guarantees "tino rangatiratanga" (full chieftainship), English gives rights of "possession"
  • Most Māori signed the Māori version, believing they retained authority

Why This Matters Today

The Effects Continue

  • Māori face ongoing disparities in health, education, income, and justice
  • Treaty settlements aim to address historical wrongs
  • Debates continue about how to honor the Treaty
  • Understanding history helps us build a fairer future

⚠️ Critical Thinking Tips

  • Who wrote this? Historical sources were mostly written by colonizers
  • What's missing? Whose voices aren't heard?
  • What was the context? What was happening at the time?
  • What are the impacts? How did this affect people then and now?

✏️ Activity: Analyzing Perspectives

Source Analysis

Choose one historical event (e.g., a land confiscation, the signing of Te Tiriti). Research two different perspectives on the event:

  1. What happened according to each perspective?
  2. How do the accounts differ?
  3. Why might they be different?
  4. Which account do you find more reliable? Why?

My analysis:

👩‍🏫 Teacher Notes

Curriculum Links

  • History: Colonization and its effects (mandatory NZ history curriculum)
  • Social Studies: Multiple perspectives, social justice

Sensitivity

This topic can be emotionally charged. Create a safe space for discussion, acknowledge historical injustices, and focus on understanding rather than blame.

Hononga Marautanga · Curriculum Alignment

Social Sciences — Tikanga ā-Iwi

Level 3–4: Investigate social, cultural, environmental, and economic questions; gather and evaluate evidence from diverse sources; communicate findings and reasoning clearly for different audiences and purposes.

English — Communication

Level 3–4: Read, interpret, and evaluate information texts; write clearly and purposefully for specific audiences; apply critical thinking skills to evaluate sources and construct well-reasoned responses.

Tuhia ōu whakaaro · Write Your Thoughts

Reflect on your learning. What was the most important idea? What question do you still have?

Aronga Mātauranga Māori

This resource sits within a kaupapa that recognises mātauranga Māori as a living knowledge system with its own frameworks, values, and ways of understanding the world. The New Zealand Curriculum calls for learning that reflects the bicultural partnership of Te Tiriti o Waitangi, which means every subject area has an obligation to engage authentically with Māori perspectives — not as cultural decoration but as substantive contributions to how we understand our topics. The concepts of manaakitanga (care for others), kaitiakitanga (guardianship), whanaungatanga (relationship and belonging), and tino rangatiratanga (self-determination) provide a values framework applicable across all learning areas, and all are relevant to the work in this handout.

Ngā Rauemi Tautoko · Resources already provided

This handout is designed to be used alongside other resources in the same unit. Related materials are linked in the unit planner. All content is provided — no additional preparation is required to use this handout in your classroom.

📋 Teacher Planning Snapshot

Ngā Whāinga Ako — Learning Intentions

Students will engage with this resource to develop a decolonized understanding of Aotearoa's history — reading the past through the eyes of tangata whenua, examining primary sources critically, and understanding how colonisation continues to shape the present. This unit centres mana Māori as the starting point, not a footnote.

Ngā Paearu Angitū — Success Criteria

  • ✅ Students can analyse a historical source for perspective, reliability, and significance — including identifying whose voices are centred or absent.
  • ✅ Students can explain how a specific historical event — such as the NZ Wars, land confiscations, or the Dawn Raids — connects to present-day inequities and Māori-led responses.

Differentiation & Inclusion

Scaffold support: Provide annotated source analysis frames for entry-level access — guiding students through the OPCVL or SOLO process step by step. Offer extension tasks asking students to compare a colonial-era source with a contemporary Māori account of the same event, analysing how the historical narrative has been contested and reclaimed.

ELL / ESOL: Primary source language (particularly 19th-century English) presents specific challenges — pre-read sources with students and pre-teach archaic or specialist vocabulary. Allow students to express historical analysis in their home language first before translating to English. Bilingual glossaries support engagement without reducing intellectual demand. Some ELL students may bring first-hand experience of colonisation from other contexts — honour these as valid comparative perspectives.

Inclusion: Decolonized history can surface difficult emotions for Māori students encountering colonial violence and injustice in the curriculum for the first time. Create a trauma-informed classroom. Neurodiverse learners benefit from chunked tasks and clear analytical scaffolds. Ensure all students understand that the purpose of this unit is not guilt but understanding — and that understanding is the foundation of partnership and change.

Mātauranga Māori lens: Decolonizing history means more than "adding Māori perspectives" — it means recognising that the dominant historical narrative itself is a colonial artefact. Whakapapa is an alternative historical framework: tracing connections, obligations, and continuity across time. The NZ Wars were not distant events — their consequences live in land ownership patterns, economic disparities, and community structures today. Tino rangatiratanga — the right of self-determination — was not surrendered at Waitangi and has been asserted continuously through protest, legislation, and resurgence. Teaching this history is an obligation of Te Tiriti partnership.

Prior knowledge: Students benefit from foundational knowledge of the Treaty of Waitangi and its context. No specialist prior knowledge required for entry-level source analysis tasks — scaffolds are provided.

Curriculum alignment