Unit 6: Future Rangatiratanga Lesson 1 of 5

Visioning Rangatiratanga 2050: Our Future as Tangata Whenua

Duration: 75 minutes Year Level: 9-13 Curriculum Areas: Social Sciences, Te Ao Māori, Civics

🌅 Karakia & Cultural Opening

"Kia tau ngā manaakitanga" - May blessings be upon us

Opening Protocol (5 minutes)

  1. Mihi: Acknowledge the land, the ancestors, and the community
  2. Intention Setting: "Today we dream forward, honoring those who dreamed us into being"
  3. Whakatōhea: Brief moment of collective breathing and centering

🎯 Learning Objectives & Success Criteria

By the end of this lesson, ākonga will be able to:

  • Envision: Create compelling visions of Māori self-determination in 2050
  • Connect: Link personal aspirations to collective rangatiratanga
  • Analyze: Examine current barriers and opportunities for tino rangatiratanga
  • Design: Develop pathways from present reality to future vision

Success Criteria - Ākonga will demonstrate:

  • ✓ Clear articulation of personal and collective aspirations
  • ✓ Understanding of rangatiratanga as dynamic, evolving concept
  • ✓ Connection between individual agency and systemic change
  • ✓ Respectful engagement with Māori worldviews and values

Phase 1: Whakapapa Futures (20 minutes)

Individual Reflection: My Place in the Continuum

15 minutes individual + 5 minutes sharing

Instructions for Ākonga:

  1. Whakapapa Backward (5 mins): Write/draw about the struggles and dreams of your ancestors/whānau that brought you to this moment
  2. Whakapapa Forward (5 mins): Envision the world you want to leave for future generations 7 generations ahead
  3. Bridge Building (5 mins): Identify 3 actions/changes that could connect these two points
Kaiako Note: Support students who may not have access to ancestral knowledge by emphasizing chosen whānau, community connections, or aspirational ancestry. Focus on the pattern of intergenerational responsibility rather than specific genealogy.

Sharing Protocol:

  • Students share one insight about their "bridge" in pairs
  • Emphasis on listening with aroha and respect
  • No judgment, only witnessing

Phase 2: Collective Vision Mapping (25 minutes)

Collaborative Activity: Aotearoa 2050 - What Does Rangatiratanga Look Like?

Setup (5 minutes):

  • Groups of 4-5 students
  • Large paper sheets and colored markers
  • Prompt cards with different sectors: Education, Environment, Governance, Economy, Health, Technology, Arts & Culture

Process (15 minutes):

Step 1: Sector Deep-Dive (8 mins)

Each group takes 1-2 sectors. Brainstorm: "What would genuine Māori self-determination look like in this area by 2050?"

Guiding Questions:
  • Who holds decision-making power?
  • How are Māori values integrated?
  • What has changed from today?
  • How are non-Māori involved respectfully?
Step 2: Visual Mapping (7 mins)

Create visual representations: drawings, symbols, words, connections. Think infographic meets vision board meets whakapapa chart.

Gallery Walk & Synthesis (5 minutes):

  • Post vision maps around room
  • Students walk and observe
  • Place dots/stars next to elements that resonate
  • Identify common themes across sectors

Phase 3: Collective Dreaming & Action Pathways (20 minutes)

Whole Class Discussion: Making Visions Reality

Discussion Structure:

Round 1: Vision Synthesis (8 minutes)
  • Question: "What patterns do you notice across our visions? What does 'rangatiratanga' mean when we see all these together?"
  • Process: Students share observations, teacher facilitates synthesis on whiteboard
  • Goal: Develop shared understanding of rangatiratanga as multifaceted, interconnected concept
Round 2: Pathway Analysis (7 minutes)
  • Question: "What would need to change in the next 5 years to make these 2050 visions possible?"
  • Process: Rapid-fire brainstorm, categorize responses into: Policy, Education, Culture, Economics, Technology
Round 3: Youth Agency (5 minutes)
  • Question: "How might rangatahi (youth) be central to creating these changes, not just waiting for them?"
  • Process: Focus on agency, leadership, innovation potential of current generation

🌅 Whakamutunga - Reflection & Closing

Individual Commitment & Closing Circle (5 minutes)

Personal Commitment:

Students write a brief commitment: "One way I will contribute to the vision of rangatiratanga in the next month is..."

Closing Circle:

  • Stand in circle
  • Each person shares one word representing their feeling about today's exploration
  • Teacher offers whakataukī: "He aha te mea nui o te ao? He tangata, he tangata, he tangata" (What is the most important thing in the world? It is people, it is people, it is people)
  • Collective karakia or moment of appreciation

📊 Assessment & Next Steps

Formative Assessment - Today's Evidence:

  • Observation: Quality of engagement in vision mapping activity
  • Discussion: Depth of thinking in pathway analysis
  • Reflection: Personal commitment demonstrates understanding

Preparation for Lesson 2:

  • Research Task: Find one example of contemporary Māori innovation or leadership
  • Reflection: How does this example connect to our 2050 visions?
  • Materials: Bring example to share (article, video, story, etc.)

📋 Interactive Assessment Tools

🎯 Quick Check Rubric

Vision Quality (1-4 scale):

  • 4: Detailed, culturally grounded, innovative
  • 3: Clear, shows understanding, some detail
  • 2: Basic vision, limited cultural connection
  • 1: Unclear or incomplete vision

🗣️ Exit Ticket Generator

Quick formative assessment questions for lesson closure

1. One aspect of rangatiratanga that excited me today was...
2. A challenge I see for 2050 is...
3. My next step in this learning journey is...

📊 Progress Tracker

Track student understanding across all lesson phases

Whakapapa Connection ○○○○
Vision Development ○○○○
Cultural Understanding ○○○○

🛠️ Teacher Resources & Adaptations

Cultural Considerations:

  • Inclusive Approach: Welcome all students regardless of heritage while centering Māori perspectives
  • Safe Spaces: Ensure students feel safe sharing personal/family information
  • Local Context: Adapt to specific iwi/hapū contexts where appropriate

Differentiation Strategies:

  • Visual Learners: Encourage use of drawings, symbols, mind maps
  • Kinesthetic: Allow standing, moving during discussions
  • Different Comfort Levels: Offer writing vs. speaking options for sharing
  • Extension: Research specific policies or initiatives that support rangatiratanga

Technology Integration:

  • Digital Vision Boards: Use tools like Miro or Padlet for collaborative mapping
  • Documentation: Photo vision maps for digital portfolio
  • Research: Use devices for finding contemporary examples