📋 Pepeha/Mihimihi Presentation Rubric

Kōrero 4: Tōku Pepeha — Assessment

Criteria Beginning (1) Developing (2) Achieved (3) Excellence (4)
📝 Content
Number and quality of pepeha lines
1-2 lines of pepeha
Missing key elements
3-4 lines of pepeha
Basic elements included
5-6 lines of pepeha
All core elements present
7+ lines with additional detail
Rich, meaningful content
🗣️ Pronunciation
Correct sounds, macrons, rhythm
Pronunciation unclear
Needs significant support
Some pronunciation errors
Key words mostly correct
Mostly clear pronunciation
Good rhythm and flow
Excellent pronunciation
Clear, confident delivery
💪 Confidence
Presence, eye contact, mana
Hesitant, quiet
Difficulty presenting
Growing confidence
Some eye contact
Confident delivery
Good audience connection
Mana-filled presence!
Inspiring to the audience
❤️ Connection
Personal meaning and authenticity
Generic, limited connection
to content
Some personal meaning
evident
Clear personal meaning
Explains significance
Deep, authentic connection
Shares cultural/personal story
🤝 Cultural Respect
Appropriate use of pepeha/mihimihi
Limited understanding of
cultural context
Basic understanding
Needs some guidance
Good cultural awareness
Appropriate choices
Excellent cultural sensitivity
Thoughtful, respectful approach

📊 Total Score

____ / 20 points

Grade:
18-20 = Excellence
14-17 = Merit
10-13 = Achieved
<10 = Working Towards

⭐ Highlights

What did this student do particularly well?

💬 Teacher Feedback / Whakahoki Kōrero

🎯 Next Steps / Ngā Mahi ā Muri

📋 Teacher Planning Snapshot

Ngā Whāinga Ako — Learning Intentions

Students will engage with this resource to craft and perform their personal pepeha — the traditional introduction that locates a person within their whakapapa, connecting maunga, awa, waka, iwi, hapū, and ingoa. Pepeha is one of the most important communicative acts in Te Ao Māori: it establishes identity, relationship, and belonging.

Ngā Paearu Angitū — Success Criteria

  • ✅ Students can recite or write their personal pepeha using the correct structural elements with accurate pronunciation.
  • ✅ Students can explain the significance of each element of their pepeha — why maunga, awa, waka, iwi, hapū, and ingoa matter as identity markers.

Differentiation & Inclusion

Scaffold support: Provide pepeha sentence frames with blanks for students to complete at the entry level. For students without known iwi or whakapapa connections — due to adoption, Pākehā or non-Māori heritage, or other circumstances — offer a mihimihi alternative that connects to their place, school, and whānau. Extend students who have completed their pepeha by asking them to research the history and significance of their maunga or awa.

ELL / ESOL: Pepeha is a context where home-language connection is a strength, not a barrier — encourage students to reflect on equivalent identity-introduction forms in their own cultural traditions. Pre-teach key kupu (maunga = mountain, awa = river, waka = canoe/ancestral vessel, iwi = tribe, hapū = subtribe, ingoa = name). Model pronunciation using te reo Māori audio resources.

Inclusion: Some students may have complex relationships to identity — adoption, disconnection from whakapapa, or non-Māori backgrounds. Create a safe, non-judgemental space where all identity expressions are honoured. Neurodiverse learners benefit from visual pepeha maps (name → maunga → awa → waka → iwi → hapū → ingoa as a connected diagram). Oral performance can be adapted — some students may prefer written or recorded formats.

Mātauranga Māori lens: Pepeha is not a language exercise — it is a relational and philosophical act. It expresses the understanding that people do not exist as isolated individuals: we are located in landscape, whakapapa, and community. Ko au ko te maunga, ko te maunga ko au — I am the mountain, the mountain is me. This reciprocal relationship between person and place is foundational to Te Ao Māori. Teaching pepeha is teaching identity, belonging, and mana.

Prior knowledge: No prior te reo Māori knowledge required. Students benefit from a brief class discussion about identity and what makes us who we are before beginning their pepeha.

Curriculum alignment