Unit 8: Hauora Wairua - Holistic Wellbeing

Exploring Te Whare Tapa Whā framework for balanced physical, mental, social, and spiritual health

🌅 Karakia & Cultural Opening

"Kia kaha te tinana" - May the body be strong

Opening Protocol (5 minutes)

  1. Honoring Our Bodies: Acknowledging our tinana (body) as taonga (treasure) that carries us through life
  2. No Judgment Space: Setting intention that all bodies are different and valuable - no body shaming or comparison
  3. Holistic Connection: Remembering that physical health connects to and supports mental, social, and spiritual wellbeing

🎯 Learning Intentions / Ngā Whāinga Akoranga & Success Criteria

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

  • Explain: How major body systems work together to maintain health
  • Identify: The three pillars of physical wellbeing (nutrition, exercise, sleep)
  • Assess: Their own current physical health habits honestly
  • Analyze: Real barriers to physical wellbeing and practical solutions
  • Create: One realistic SMART goal for physical health improvement

Success Criteria - Ākonga will demonstrate:

  • ✓ Understanding of at least 3 body systems and their functions
  • ✓ Knowledge of teenage-specific health needs
  • ✓ Honest self-assessment of physical wellbeing
  • ✓ Identification of personal barriers and solutions
  • ✓ Specific, measurable physical health goal

📋 Kaiako Planning Snapshot / Teacher Planning Snapshot

Timing Overview

  • Karakia / Opening: 5 min
  • Activity 1 — Body Systems Carousel: 10 min
  • Activity 2 — The Big 3: 15 min
  • Activity 3 — Physical Health Reality Check: 15 min
  • Activity 4 — Barriers & Solutions: 15 min
  • Whakamutunga / Closure: 5 min
  • Total: ~65 min

Preparation Checklist

  • Carousel stations set up before class (body systems posters or cards)
  • Print barriers/solutions worksheet if using paper-based option
  • Have pastoral care contact details available

Curriculum Alignment — Achievement Objectives

NZ Curriculum — Health & Physical Education, Level 4–5

  • Personal Health & Physical Development (A1): Students demonstrate understanding of how taha tinana (physical wellbeing) interacts with all dimensions of hauora — Achievement Objective directly addressed through body systems and physical health literacy
  • Personal Health & Physical Development (A2): Students identify barriers to physical health and develop strategies to overcome them — Achievement Objective addressed in Activity 4

Key Competencies: Thinking (problem-solving barriers); Managing Self (personal health habits); Relating to Others (pair/group discussion)

Inclusion & Accessibility Guidance

  • ESOL / ELL: Pre-teach body system vocabulary with visual diagrams. Allow labelling in home language first.
  • ADHD / Neurodiverse: Carousel format naturally suits movement needs — allow extended time at stations of high interest.
  • Accessibility: Ensure carousel stations are physically accessible; provide printed versions for students with visual processing needs.
  • Pastoral: Students may disclose health concerns — have referral pathway ready and respond without alarm.

Activity 1: Body Systems Carousel (10 minutes)

Explore How Our Bodies Work

Station rotations + gallery walk

Setup (Before Class):

Create 5 stations around the room with chart paper labeled with each body system. Provide markers at each station.

The 5 Stations:

Station 1: Circulatory System

Heart & blood vessels

Station 2: Respiratory System

Lungs & breathing

Station 3: Digestive System

Food & nutrients

Station 4: Muscular/Skeletal System

Movement & support

Station 5: Nervous System

Brain & signals

Activity Flow (7 minutes):

  1. Divide class into 5 groups (one per station)
  2. Groups spend ~1.5 minutes at each station writing:
    • What this system does
    • Why it matters for health
    • One way to keep it healthy
  3. Rotate groups through all stations
  4. Quick gallery walk to see all responses (2 min)

💡 Extension: Ask advanced students to identify connections between systems (e.g., circulatory brings oxygen from respiratory to muscles)

Activity 2: The Big 3 - Nutrition, Exercise, Sleep (15 minutes)

Three Essential Pillars of Physical Health

Direct instruction + discussion

💚 Pillar 1: Nutrition (4 minutes)

  • What: Balanced diet with variety - vegetables, fruits, whole grains, protein, healthy fats
  • Why: Fuel for energy, growth, brain function, immune system
  • Teen Needs: 2000-3000 calories/day (depending on activity), extra calcium & iron for growth
  • Kai Māori: Traditional foods like kūmara, fish, seafood are nutrient-dense
  • Hydration: 6-8 glasses of water daily, more when exercising
  • Real Talk: Healthy eating doesn't mean perfect - it's about good choices most of the time

💪 Pillar 2: Exercise (4 minutes)

  • What: 60+ minutes of physical activity daily for teenagers
  • Why: Strengthens heart/lungs, builds bones/muscles, improves mood, better sleep
  • Types: Aerobic (running, swimming), strength (weights, push-ups), flexibility (yoga, stretching)
  • Real Talk: Exercise doesn't have to mean sports - walking, dancing, gardening all count!
  • Māori Perspective: Traditional activities like waka ama, kapa haka, haka build fitness + cultural connection

😴 Pillar 3: Sleep (4 minutes)

  • What: 8-10 hours per night for teenagers (yes, really!)
  • Why: Brain consolidates learning, body repairs/grows, hormones regulate, immune system strengthens
  • Teen Reality: Your brain is wired to stay up later and sleep in - that's biological, not laziness
  • Sleep Hygiene: Dark room, no screens 30-60 min before bed, consistent schedule
  • Real Talk: Most teenagers are chronically sleep-deprived - this affects mood, learning, immune system

Quick Poll (3 minutes):

"Which of the Big 3 is hardest for you?"

Thumbs up = nutrition, sideways = exercise, down = sleep

Brief discussion: Why are these challenging? (Most teens will struggle with sleep!)

⚠️ Important Teaching Points:

  • Frame as information to empower, not to create guilt
  • Acknowledge barriers are real (poverty, family situation, mental health)
  • Progress matters more than perfection
  • Bodies have different needs - individualize approaches

Activity 3: Physical Health Reality Check (15 minutes)

Honest Self-Assessment

Individual reflection + tracker worksheet

📄 Handout: Distribute the Physical Wellbeing Tracker so ākonga can log daily movement, kai, and energy. Model how to complete the first line together.

Model Honest Assessment (2 minutes):

"For nutrition, I'm doing okay - I eat breakfast most days and have vegetables at dinner. But I drink too much soft drink and skip lunch when busy. I'd give myself 6/10. No judgment - just awareness."

Individual Assessment (10 minutes):

Students assess their current habits in each area:

Nutrition Check:
  • Rate eating habits 1-10
  • Water intake daily?
  • Eating regular meals?
  • What's working? What could improve?
Exercise Check:
  • Rate activity level 1-10
  • Minutes of movement daily?
  • Variety of activities?
  • Do you enjoy it?
Sleep Check:
  • Rate sleep 1-10
  • Hours per night on average?
  • Wake up feeling rested?
  • Sleep quality good?

Reflection Prompt: Which area do you most want to improve?

💙 Pastoral Care Note: Circulate and observe (without reading over shoulders). Watch for concerning patterns - extreme dieting, over-exercising, very low ratings across all areas. Follow up privately with support resources.

Activity 4: Barriers & Solutions Workshop (15 minutes)

Problem-Solving for Real Life

5 min brainstorm + 6 min small groups + 4 min sharing

Brainstorm Barriers (5 minutes):

As a class, list common barriers on the board. Validate that these are REAL challenges:

Nutrition Barriers:
  • Cost of healthy food
  • Busy family schedules
  • Lack of cooking skills
  • Food deserts in neighborhood
  • Cultural food differences
Exercise Barriers:
  • Lack of time
  • No safe spaces
  • Self-consciousness
  • Disability or injury
  • No transport to facilities
  • Expensive equipment
Sleep Barriers:
  • Homework load
  • Family responsibilities
  • Anxiety/stress
  • Phone/social media
  • Noisy/unsafe living situation
  • Early school start times

Small Group Problem-Solving (6 minutes):

In groups of 3-4:

  • Choose 2-3 barriers that feel most relevant to your group
  • Brainstorm creative, realistic solutions
  • Focus on what's in your control (not systemic changes but individual strategies)

Share Solutions (4 minutes):

Quick popcorn sharing - groups call out their best solutions. Record good ideas on board.

Sample Solutions to Highlight:
  • Nutrition: Seasonal vegetables, bulk buying, community gardens, simple cooking, water > soft drinks
  • Exercise: YouTube workouts, walking/biking to school, dancing at home, playing with siblings, active video games
  • Sleep: Better time management, no homework in bed, communicate with teachers if overwhelmed, weekend catch-up

Whakamutunga - Goal Setting & Closure (10 minutes)

Introduce SMART Goals (2 minutes):

Teach goal framework:

  • Specific - What exactly will you do?
  • Measurable - How will you track it?
  • Achievable - Is it realistic for you?
  • Relevant - Does it matter to your wellbeing?
  • Time-bound - When will you do it?

Example:

❌ Bad goal: "Get healthier"

✅ Good goal: "Drink 6 glasses of water every day this week"

Set Personal Physical Health Goal (5 minutes):

Students write ONE goal for the next week. Must include:

  • What exactly will I do?
  • How often?
  • How will I know if I succeeded?
Good Goal Examples:
  • "Go for a 20-minute walk 4 times this week"
  • "Eat breakfast every school day this week"
  • "Be in bed by 10pm on school nights this week"
  • "Do 10 push-ups and 10 sit-ups every morning"
  • "Put phone away 30 minutes before bed for 5 nights"

Exit Ticket (3 minutes):

Accountability Partner: Share your goal with one classmate - check in with each other next week!

Tracker kōrero:

Show learners how to store their Physical Wellbeing Tracker safely (kete, whānau folder, device). Set expectation: one row per evening, bring it to Lesson 3 for Kai Check-in.

🏠 Homework / Extension

Required: Track Your Physical Health Goal (Week-long)

For the next 7 days, complete your Physical Wellbeing Tracker each evening:

  • Record your movement, kai, hydration, and energy level
  • Note barriers or supports in the final column
  • Tick whether you met your SMART goal for the day
  • Share one insight with whānau by the weekend

Bring the tracker to Lesson 3 for the kai reflection circle.

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