Traditional Weather Prediction
Te Matapae Huarere — Reading the Signs of Nature · Mātauranga Māori
Ngā Whāinga Akoranga · Learning Intentions
- Identify natural signs (tohu) Māori used to predict weather
- Explain the scientific basis behind traditional weather observation
- Compare Māori observational knowledge with modern meteorological methods
- Collect and evaluate your own 5-day weather observation data
Paearu Angitu · Success Criteria
- I can name and describe at least four tohu Māori used to predict weather
- I can give a scientific explanation for why one tohu works
- I can complete a 5-day weather observation log with my own predictions
- I can explain how Māori and modern weather prediction are both valid knowledge systems
Hononga Marautanga · Curriculum Alignment
Level 3–4: investigate how natural patterns and events affect living things; understand how weather is influenced by natural systems; compare traditional and scientific approaches to observation.
Level 3–4: build on prior knowledge; compare different knowledge systems; communicate science ideas clearly using evidence from observation.
Whakataukī
"Ahakoa he iti, he pounamu"
Although small, it is precious. Small signs in nature carry important messages.
For generations, Māori observed the natural world to predict weather. This knowledge — embedded in the Maramataka — was essential for planting and harvesting crops, planning fishing and seafood gathering, navigating safely by waka, and preparing communities for storms.
Ngā Tohu Huarere · Reading Nature's Signs
These are six tohu (natural signs) used in traditional weather observation. For each, the sign is described along with its meaning and possible scientific explanation.
Sign: Tūī singing loudly and flying high
Meaning: Good weather coming — calm conditions ahead
Sign: Red sky at night (shepherd's delight)
Meaning: Fine weather tomorrow — pressure system moving through from the west
Sign: Heavy flowering in November–December
Meaning: Hot, dry summer ahead
Sign: Cloud caps forming on mountain peaks
Meaning: Rain coming — warm moist air hitting high terrain
Sign: Unusual wave patterns or a "boiling" sea
Meaning: Storm approaching — distant swells arriving ahead of low pressure
Sign: Pipi and tuatua burrowing deeper into sand
Meaning: Bad weather coming — shellfish sense pressure changes
1. Choose two tohu above. For each, write a scientific explanation — what natural mechanism might make this sign reliable?
2. Which tohu would be most useful for a waka crew leaving from the coast? Why?
Māori me Pākehā · Traditional vs Modern Methods
| Traditional (Māori) | Modern (Meteorology) |
|---|---|
| Observe animal and plant behaviour | Satellites and radar tracking |
| Read sky colours and cloud formations | Weather balloons measuring upper atmosphere |
| Watch wind direction and sea patterns | Weather stations with sensors and barometers |
| Knowledge passed through generations (oral) | Computer models and global data sharing |
| Local and regional — place-specific | Global — updated hourly or more |
| Embedded in Maramataka (lunar calendar) | Expressed as probability percentages |
In what ways is Maramataka observation similar to modern meteorology? In what ways is it different?
Pukapuka Huarere · 5-Day Weather Observation Log
Observe the weather for 5 days. Look for natural signs AND record the official MetService forecast. Compare your predictions against actual outcomes.
| Day | Natural signs observed | My prediction | Actual weather |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monday | |||
| Tuesday | |||
| Wednesday | |||
| Thursday | |||
| Friday |
1. How accurate were your predictions based on natural signs? Were some tohu more reliable than others?
2. Why might birds behave differently before a storm? Think about: air pressure, humidity, survival instincts.
3. What advantages does traditional weather knowledge have that modern methods don't?
Uiuinga Kaumātua · Kaumātua Interview
Ask a grandparent, kaumātua, or older community member about weather signs they remember or use. Record their knowledge here.
Person interviewed (name or relationship):
Weather sign or tohu they shared:
How did they learn this knowledge? How long has it been in their family?
Kupu Māori · Weather Vocabulary
Aronga Mātauranga Māori
Meteorology and Maramataka are not competing systems — they are complementary approaches to the same challenge: understanding and predicting the natural world. NIWA (National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research) increasingly works alongside Māori knowledge holders to integrate tohu-based observation with instrumental data. Some iwi-based environmental monitoring programmes now record Maramataka observations alongside temperature, rainfall, and wind data — building datasets that span traditional and scientific time frames.
The kaitiakitanga of weather knowledge means passing it on accurately. When a kaumātua observes the behaviour of tūī or the flowering of pōhutukawa, they are reading data — different tools, the same respect for evidence. In te ao Māori, whakaaro (careful thinking) and tūhura (observation) are central values. Both science and Maramataka share these foundations.
Ngā Rauemi Tautoko · Support Materials
Resources already provided:
- This handout with tohu reference grid and observation log
- MetService (metservice.com) — for daily regional forecasts
- NIWA CliFlo (cliflo.niwa.co.nz) — historical weather data
- Te Ara encyclopedia — Maramataka articles
Aronga Rerekē · Differentiated Pathways
Tīmata · Entry Level
Describe 3 tohu from the grid in your own words. Complete the 5-day observation log. Answer question 1 in the analysis section.
Paerewa · On Level
Complete all sections including the kaumātua interview. Give a scientific explanation for at least two tohu. Compare traditional and modern methods in full sentences.
Tūāpae · Extension
Complete all sections. After your 5-day log, calculate what percentage of your predictions were correct. Compare your accuracy to the MetService forecast accuracy for the same period. Write a paragraph: does traditional observation have scientific validity? Cite specific evidence from your log and from the tohu grid.
📋 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
- Reading — Making Meaning: Students will select and use sources of information, processes, and strategies to identify, form, and express ideas across a range of texts.
- Writing — Creating Meaning: Students will select and use sources of information, processes, and strategies to write in a range of text types for a variety of purposes and audiences.