Ngā Manu o te Taiao • Place-based inquiry • Years 4-8 • Print-ready drawing space

Manu Habitat Map

Use this template to map where manu, food, shelter, water, and threats appear around your kura or local area. It helps ākonga connect bird observations to place, not just species lists, so later action plans are grounded in real local evidence.

Ingoa / Name
Akomanga / Class

Best for

Week 1 mapping walks, follow-up to a manu count, social studies place inquiry, or any lesson where students need to link “where” with “why” before proposing solutions.

Kaiako use

Choose one manageable space to map. Model how to include both habitat supports and threats so the map becomes a tool for reasoning, not just a colourful sketch.

Akonga use

Students can draw, label, and annotate a local site using bilingual legend ideas. They can also identify the strongest habitat area and one place that needs care.

Free mapping core, premium localisation path

This template works as-is. If you want an aerial-photo overlay, a local reserve version, or a junior scaffold with pre-labelled landmarks, Te Wānanga and Creation Studio can adapt it without compromising print quality or writing space.

  • Swap the generic legend for species, landmarks, or hazards in your actual setting.
  • Create a simplified version with fewer symbols and more sentence frames.
  • Save a version for repeated seasonal comparisons in My Kete.

Kaiako planning snapshot

  • Use length: 15 minutes for field sketching, 10-15 minutes for labels and analysis.
  • Grouping: Pairs work best so one learner sketches while the other notices details.
  • Prep: Decide the map boundary, review any out-of-bounds areas, and gather clipboards or firm backing if students are drawing outdoors.
  • Differentiation: Support learners can use a partly pre-labelled map; stretch learners can compare two zones or annotate likely movement paths for manu.
  • Neurodiversity support: Offer symbol stickers, chunk the task into “draw / label / reflect”, and allow oral explanation before writing if planning and sequencing are hard.
Mapping Place and environment Outdoor inquiry

Resources already provided

  • Large A4-safe drawing space with orientation marker
  • Bilingual legend ideas for habitat supports, manu sightings, and threats
  • Observation prompts to turn the map into usable inquiry evidence
  • Space for follow-up action thinking
  • Linked curriculum companion for kaiako planning

Everything named in the activity is here or linked directly, so the task can run tomorrow without building a separate map sheet first.

Ngā Whāinga Akoranga / Learning Intentions

  • We are learning to describe a place using maps, symbols, and labels.
  • We are learning to notice which habitat features help or harm local manu.
  • We are learning to connect observations of place with future kaitiakitanga action.

Paearu Angitu / Success Criteria

  • I can show where key habitat features are on my map.
  • I can identify one strong habitat area and one challenge for manu.
  • I can suggest one realistic improvement for the place I mapped.

Curriculum integration / Te Marautanga alignment

Use the companion page to connect this map with place-and-environment social studies and early spatial mathematics. The resource is strongest when students talk about who uses the place, what matters there, and how location affects bird life.

Social Studies Geometry Local places

Why this matters in Aotearoa

Place-based learning matters because manu respond to actual landscapes, not abstract diagrams. A matauranga Maori lens reminds us that places carry relationship, memory, and responsibility. When students map where food, shelter, wai, noise, and people intersect, they begin to see how care for place supports care for life.

Map my place

Draw your school edge, garden, field, stream edge, reserve, or another agreed site. Use the legend to mark where manu were seen, heard, fed, or disturbed.

Legend / Kupu tohu

🌳
Rakau
Trees or taller shelter
🌿
Food plants
Seeds, berries, or nectar sources
💧
Wai
Water source or damp area
🐦
Manu sighting
Where a bird was seen or heard
⚠️
Threat
Noise, rubbish, glass, or predators
🏫
Whare
Buildings, fences, or hard surfaces
Best habitat
Most welcoming area for manu
🛠️
Action idea
Where we could improve the space

Map reflections

Best habitat area

One place that felt unsafe or difficult for manu

How I know this from my map

One change our school or community could make

Support: label the map with single words and arrows. Core: add full labels and one written explanation. Stretch: compare how two different groups might view or use this place.

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.

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 · Support Materials

This handout is designed to be used alongside the broader unit resources available at Te Kete Ako handouts library. Related resources from the same unit are linked in the unit planner. All resources are provided — no additional preparation is required to use this handout in your classroom.

📋 Teacher Planning Snapshot

Ngā Whāinga Ako — Learning Intentions

Students will investigate the ecological roles of ngā manu o te taiao — the birds of the natural world — within local habitats, drawing on both science and mātauranga Māori to understand why native birds are taonga and what kaitiakitanga requires of us in their protection.

Ngā Paearu Angitū — Success Criteria

  • ✅ I can describe the ecological roles of at least three native New Zealand birds and their habitat needs.
  • ✅ I can explain threats facing native manu and evaluate conservation strategies used by kaitiaki.
  • ✅ I can connect traditional Māori knowledge of manu to contemporary ecological understanding.

Differentiation & Inclusion

Scaffold support: Provide illustrated species cards with key facts for entry-level learners. Offer extension tasks requiring students to design a habitat restoration plan using ecological principles and mātauranga Māori knowledge systems.

ELL / ESOL: Pre-teach key science and te reo Māori vocabulary for native species. Use visual supports — photographs, recordings of bird calls, and habitat diagrams. Allow students to label and describe in home language first.

Inclusion: Use sound recordings of native bird calls, outdoor observation activities, and tactile materials. Neurodiverse learners benefit from structured observation journals and clear inquiry sequences. Ensure field-based tasks have accessible alternatives.

Mātauranga Māori lens: Explore Māori relationships with manu as tohu — birds as environmental indicators and messengers carrying cultural meaning. Connect to traditional ecological knowledge about seasonal patterns of bird behaviour (maramataka), the use of manu feathers in taonga (e.g. kahu huruhuru), and the role of specific birds such as kiwi, huia, and kōkako as taonga species with deep whakapapa significance. Kaitiakitanga of manu is both practical and spiritual.

Prior knowledge: Best used after introductory ecology concepts. Connects well to science food webs and biodiversity units.

Curriculum alignment