🧺 Te Kete Ako

Place Description Writing

Place Description Writing · 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
✍️ English — Writing 🌿 Descriptive / Creative 🎓 Year 7–10 🇳🇿 NZC Level 3–5

Place Description Writing — He Whakaahua Wāhi

🏔️ Whakaaro whenua — thinking through land
"Ko ia te here tangata ki ōna whenua — tōna māramatanga, tōna mana" — It is this that binds people to their land — their understanding of it, their authority over it.
(In te ao Māori, the relationship between person and place was not metaphorical — it was specific, named, and mutual. The best description writing achieves the same specificity: not "a beautiful river" but "the Whanganui, still carrying its anger from the gorge, brown at the banks where children had played for centuries.")

Description is the hardest kind of writing to do well — and the most important. Everything from news reporting to scientific observation to fiction depends on the ability to convey a specific place with enough precision that a reader who has never been there can see, hear, and feel it. The secret is not beautiful vocabulary — it is precise observation, unexpected angles, and sensory specificity.

Part 1 — He Tauira Tuhituhi: Model Texts

Read both passages carefully. They both describe the same type of place — a river — but from very different perspectives and with very different effects.

The Whanganui winds through the gorge like something that has been wounded and won't lie still. The cliffs green with fern come close. In places the water goes quiet — a held breath, a moment of consideration — and then it commits again, brown and serious, carrying a piece of flotsam or a leaf like a small urgent letter. The jet boat's noise is human and temporary. Everything else here is on a different timescale. — Original passage (Te Kete Ako, 2026)
The river runs fast in the morning. Its surface catches the light in flat, clean pieces. At the bend the current goes wide, lazy, and a grey heron stands in the shallows — one leg raised, perfectly still — like someone who has just finished a long thought and not yet begun the next one. My grandfather said the awa remembers everyone who has stood on its banks. I had never known what to do with that until now. — Original passage (Te Kete Ako, 2026)
  1. Language analysis: Both passages use personification (treating the river as if it has feelings or intentions). Identify one example in each. Explain what emotion each creates in the reader.
  2. Passage 1 uses the phrase "like a small urgent letter." Passage 2 uses "like someone who has just finished a long thought." Both are similes. Which do you find more effective, and why? What makes a simile feel fresh rather than clichéd?
  3. Passage 2 connects physical observation to family memory ("My grandfather said the awa remembers..."). This is the text-to-self move in description — where the writer's own presence enters the landscape. What does this add to the description? What does it risk?

Part 2 — Ngā Tikanga Tuhituhi: The Technique Toolkit

🌿 Simile Comparing using "like" or "as." Best when unexpected: "the road curved like a question mark left unanswered."
🌿 Metaphor Stating something IS something else: "The mountain is a sleeping elder, its breath the cloud that rolls off the peak."
🌿 Personification Giving a place human qualities: "The wind came down from the ranges like it had an argument with the valley."
🌿 Sensory detail Smell and sound are more powerful than sight in description: "the smell of fermenting mud, the creak of a gate nobody had oiled."
🌿 Specific nouns "A bird" = weak. "A pūkeko" = strong. "A pūkeko pulling something white from the grass at the edge of the drain" = excellent.
🌿 Scale shift Move between the vast and the tiny: "From far away, it's just a hillside. Up close — the moss is a world."
🌿 Te reo naming Using Māori place-names or kīwaha adds both precision and cultural depth: "past the pōhutukawa row, past the pātaka where the fishing gear went."
🌿 Negative space Describing what's missing or absent is as powerful as describing what's there: "No birdcall. Just the generator, and the sound of a truck backing."
  1. Choose THREE techniques from the grid. For each, write your own example sentence describing a real place you know (your school, a local park, your street, a marae). Be as specific as possible — vague description earns no marks.
  2. "Negative space" (describing absence) is the most underused technique in student writing. Write 3 sentences that describe a place entirely through what is missing, gone, or absent. No "there was no" — show it instead.

Part 3 — He Whakaaro ā-Rongo: Sensory Brainstorm

Pick ONE place you know well. Complete the sensory grid below before you write. The richest descriptions come from writers who over-observe before they start.

👁️ Sight

👂 Sound

👃 Smell

🤲 Touch / texture

👅 Taste (if any)

💭 Feeling / mood

  1. Circle the THREE most unusual or unexpected details in your grid above — the ones a generic travel brochure would never include. These become the heart of your description.

Part 4 — He Tuhituhi: Write Your Place Description (200–300 words)

Using your sensory notes and at least 4 techniques from the toolkit, write a vivid description of your place. Rules:

  • No "It was a nice day" or "The place was beautiful" — show, don't tell.
  • Include at least one te reo Māori word, name, or phrase — correctly used and with appropriate context.
  • Include one moment where your own presence or a person's memory enters the landscape.
  • End with a sentence that leaves the reader with a feeling, not a fact.

Self-review: Circle every adjective in your writing. Ask: is each one the most specific adjective possible? Could you replace 3 of them with a concrete noun or verb instead?

✍️ Whakamutunga — Ko tōu reo, ko āu wāhi

The ability to describe a place precisely — to hold it in language so that others can see it — is an act of love and an act of memory. When places are not described, they are more easily destroyed or forgotten. The writers who have most powerfully shaped how New Zealanders see this land — Katherine Mansfield at the Wellington harbour, Witi Ihimaera in the Poverty Bay hills, Patricia Grace in Porirua — have all done so by refusing vagueness. Specificity is reverence.

Te wero: Read your finished description to someone who has been to the place you described. Ask them: what did I get right? What did I miss? What surprised you?

🌿 Ngā Rauemi Hono

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 build core literacy skills — reading comprehension, writing craft, and oral language — grounded in the rich storytelling traditions of Aotearoa New Zealand and the literacy practices that empower rangatahi voice.

Ngā Paearu Angitū — Success Criteria

  • ✅ Students can apply the literacy skill or strategy featured in this resource with growing independence.
  • ✅ Students can connect this resource's literacy focus to authentic texts, contexts, or purposes from their own world.

Differentiation & Inclusion

Scaffold support: Provide sentence starters, word banks, or graphic organisers for entry-level access. Model think-alouds before independent tasks. Offer extension challenges that deepen analysis — for example, comparing the author's craft choices across two texts or writing an additional stanza or paragraph.

ELL / ESOL: Pre-teach key vocabulary before reading. Allow students to annotate in their home language first, then translate key ideas. Use shared reading and think-pair-share structures to lower the stakes for language production. Bilingual glossaries and visual text supports help bridge comprehension.

Inclusion: Chunk reading and writing tasks into manageable steps. Offer multimodal options — oral, visual, or digital — for students to demonstrate understanding. Neurodiverse learners benefit from clear task structures and explicit success criteria. Affirm diverse linguistic and cultural backgrounds as assets, not deficits.

Mātauranga Māori lens: Literacy in Te Ao Māori encompasses tātai kōrero (the arrangement of speech), waiata, whakataukī, and the deep art of kōrero — storytelling as knowledge transmission. Encourage students to see their own family stories and community knowledge as valid literacy texts. Karakia opens and closes learning with intention. Tātai kōrero honours the voice.

Prior knowledge: Adaptable across year levels. No specialist prior knowledge required for entry-level engagement. Teachers may wish to pre-read the resource and anticipate vocabulary that needs pre-teaching.

Curriculum alignment