Unit 2: Decolonized Aotearoa History - Centering Māori Agency, Resistance & Sovereignty

Counter-narrative to colonial histories, highlighting Māori perspectives and ongoing fight for tino rangatiratanga

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Focus Pātai for the whole wānanga

  • Why does it matter what we call these conflicts—"New Zealand Wars", "Land Wars", or "Aotearoa Wars"?
  • How did Māori military innovation challenge the world's most powerful empire?
  • What does the defense of tino rangatiratanga look like when our sovereignty is under threat today?

Return to these questions at each transition; they anchor the end-of-lesson commitments.

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Learning Intentions (kaiako version)

Guide ākonga to reframe colonial narratives about the wars of the 1860s, analyze Māori strategic brilliance, and connect historical resistance to contemporary sovereignty struggles.

  • Interrogate naming conventions and their political implications (New Zealand Wars → Aotearoa Wars).
  • Analyze primary sources showing modern pā design and guerrilla tactics.
  • Evaluate the sophistication of Māori military engineering compared to British expectations.
  • Connect historical tino rangatiratanga defense to current land rights movements.

Success Criteria (ākonga-facing)

  • I can explain why the name "Aotearoa Wars" centers Māori perspectives.
  • I can describe two examples of sophisticated military strategy used by Māori leaders.
  • I can identify the science/engineering principles behind modern pā construction.
  • I can connect historical resistance to a current tino rangatiratanga issue.
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Te Mātaiaho threads visible in this lesson

  • Tangata Whenuatanga · PS4: Ākonga examine how Māori exercised rangatiratanga through strategic resistance.
  • Mātauranga Māori: Engineering knowledge embedded in pā design; oral histories of military leaders.
  • Te Tiriti-honouring practice: Explicitly names the wars as conflicts over Article 2 (tino rangatiratanga) protections.
  • Critical Thinking: Challenges colonial narratives through primary source analysis.

Whakatūwhera - Te Ahi Kā (The Burning Fire)

"Te Ahi Kā" refers to the home fires that are kept burning to demonstrate occupation and rights to the land. In the 1860s, these fires became a literal and metaphorical defense of existence. The resistance was not just about land—it was about maintaining the *mana* to exist as Māori.

"Ka whawhai tonu mātou, ake ake ake!" - We will fight forever, forever, forever!

👩‍🏫 Teaching Instructions – The New Zealand Wars Documentary (15:05)

Distribute the Aotearoa Wars Video Companion before pressing play. This RNZ documentary segment provides a balanced overview of the conflicts from 1845-1872.

Haerenga Ako – Lesson Flow (75 minutes)

1. Whakatūwhera · The Power of Naming (10 mins)

Begin with karakia. Display three terms side-by-side: "New Zealand Wars", "Land Wars", "Aotearoa Wars". Ask: What does each name emphasize? What does it hide?

Teacher moves

  • Record student observations on a T-chart: "Colonial framing" vs "Māori-centered framing".
  • Introduce whakataukī: "Ka whawhai tonu mātou, ake ake ake!" – Rewi Maniapoto's declaration at Ōrākau.
  • Explain that this lesson uses "Aotearoa Wars" to center Māori agency and sovereignty.

Differentiation: Provide sentence stems for ākonga who need structured language support.

2. Guided Viewing – RNZ Documentary (20 mins)

Prime ākonga with the video companion's vocabulary preview and hypothesis prompts. Use the pause points to discuss naming, strategy, and aftermath.

👂 Mātanga Whispers: The "Kūpapa" Complexity

Historians often label Māori who fought with the Crown as "loyalists" or "traitors" (kūpapa). Challenge this binary.

Many iwi (like Te Arawa or Ngāti Porou) allied with the Crown not out of love for the Queen, but to:

  • Settle old scores (*utu*) with rival iwi.
  • Protect their own lands from confiscation (a strategy that often failed).
  • Ensure their own survival in a rapidly changing world.

Ask: "Were they traitors, or were they strategic survivors?"

Evidence to bank: Quote-capture strips, vocabulary annotations, and initial reactions to colonial narrative framing.

3. Strategy Stations – Military Innovation Analysis (30 mins)

Set up three stations. Groups rotate every 10 minutes, analyzing a different strategic domain at each station.

Station A: Modern Pā Engineering

Analyze diagrams of underground bunkers, angled palisades, and anti-artillery trenches. Identify engineering principles that neutralized British cannon.

Station B: Guerrilla Tactics

Study Te Kooti Arikirangi's campaigns. Map ambush strategies and analyze how knowledge of whenua became a military advantage.

Station C: Psychological Warfare

Examine the role of haka, strategic retreats, and declarations like Rewi Maniapoto's at Ōrākau in shaping British morale and Māori unity.

🔬 Science Lens: Physics of the Pā

Why couldn't British cannons destroy the pā?

1. Impact Physics (Dampening)

Māori wove bundles of green flax (harakeke) into the palisades. Unlike rigid stone walls which shatter under cannon fire, the flax absorbed the kinetic energy, "catching" the cannonballs like a catcher's mitt.

2. Geometric Engineering

Trenches were dug in zig-zag patterns. If a shell landed in one section, the blast wave and shrapnel couldn't travel in a straight line, limiting casualties—a technique later standard in WWI.

🌍 Global Context: The Invention of Modern Trench Warfare

Gate Pā (Pukehinahina), 1864: 230 Māori defenders held off 1,700 British troops with heavy artillery. The British suffered their heaviest defeat of the wars.

Western Front, 1914 (50 years later): European armies finally adopted the exact same trench systems (bunkers, fire steps, zig-zags) that Māori had invented to survive modern artillery. British officers who fought in NZ recorded these designs and took them back to Sandhurst Military Academy.

Teacher checkpoints

  • At each rotation, ask one group: "What surprised you about Māori military sophistication?"
  • Collect station worksheets showing analysis depth and connection-making.
  • Photograph exemplar responses for display and moderation.

4. Whakawhiti Kōrero – Then and Now Connections (15 mins)

Facilitate a structured discussion connecting historical tino rangatiratanga defense to contemporary issues.

Discussion prompts:

  • Ihumātao occupation: How does peaceful resistance connect to 1860s strategies?
  • Marine and Coastal Area Act: What are communities defending today?
  • If you were advising a hapū today, what strategic lessons from the Aotearoa Wars would you share?

Output: Capture exit reflections (audio/written) showing connection between historical and contemporary tino rangatiratanga.

📊 Formative Assessment, Mātairea Support & Moderation Workflow

Mātainuku evidence you can hold in your hands

Collect at least three artefacts per student and note progression language for tagging uploads.

  • Quote-capture strips: Rangatahi voice interpreted through documentary analysis.
  • Strategy station worksheets: Show analysis of pā engineering, guerrilla tactics, or psychological warfare.
  • Then-and-Now connection statement: Links historical resistance to contemporary sovereignty issues.

Mātairea differentiation moves

  • Scaffold: Provide graphic organizers for strategy stations; offer bilingual vocabulary cards; pair English-dominant learners with te reo speakers.
  • Extend: Research a specific rangatira (Tītokowaru, Te Kooti, Rewi Maniapoto) and create a leadership profile connecting their strategies to modern protest movements.
  • Wellbeing: Some ākonga may have iwi connections to specific conflicts—offer space for sharing family histories or processing intergenerational trauma with care.

Moderation tip: Tag uploads with U2L2-resistance and note whether evidence demonstrates critical analysis, historical knowledge, or contemporary connection.

Kaiako checkpoints after each phase

  • During naming discussion, check that each learner can articulate why terminology matters.
  • At station rotations, conference with each group: ask "What engineering/tactical/psychological principle are you seeing?"
  • At whakawhiti kōrero, record audio reflections from a selection of ākonga making contemporary connections.

🧺 Resources, Whānau Partnerships & Next Steps

Whānau & hapori connections

Send a pānui explaining the lesson focus on the Aotearoa Wars. Invite whānau to share any iwi histories of the conflicts—many families carry oral histories of tūpuna who fought. Remind whānau these stories are taonga; ākonga should approach them with manaakitanga.

Sensitive content note: The Aotearoa Wars involved significant trauma and land loss. Provide resources for pastoral care if needed.

Homework / extension pathways

  • Research your iwi/hapū connection to the Aotearoa Wars (if applicable) and bring one story or fact to share.
  • Watch additional segments of the RNZ documentary and add to your quote-capture journal.

Whakaaro - Reflection

The Aotearoa Wars were not a rebellion—they were a calculated, sophisticated defense of tino rangatiratanga against an empire. Understanding Māori as military innovators, not victims, changes how we see both history and contemporary struggles for sovereignty.

"Ka whawhai tonu mātou, ake ake ake!" – We will fight forever, forever, forever! The spirit of Ōrākau lives in every assertion of mana motuhake today.

Cross-Curricular Extensions

Technology

Design a 3D model of a modern pā showing engineering innovations; calculate structural load-bearing.

English

Write a speech from the perspective of Rewi Maniapoto at Ōrākau; craft a persuasive essay on naming conventions.

Mathematics

Analyze casualty statistics and force ratios; calculate the geometric angles of pā defensive structures.

Geography

Map confiscated lands (raupatu) and trace their current status; analyze how terrain shaped military strategy.

📋 Teacher Planning Snapshot

Ngā Whāinga Ako — Learning Intentions

Students will engage with this resource to develop a decolonized understanding of Aotearoa's history — reading the past through the eyes of tangata whenua, examining primary sources critically, and understanding how colonisation continues to shape the present. This unit centres mana Māori as the starting point, not a footnote.

Ngā Paearu Angitū — Success Criteria

  • ✅ Students can analyse a historical source for perspective, reliability, and significance — including identifying whose voices are centred or absent.
  • ✅ Students can explain how a specific historical event — such as the NZ Wars, land confiscations, or the Dawn Raids — connects to present-day inequities and Māori-led responses.

Differentiation & Inclusion

Scaffold support: Provide annotated source analysis frames for entry-level access — guiding students through the OPCVL or SOLO process step by step. Offer extension tasks asking students to compare a colonial-era source with a contemporary Māori account of the same event, analysing how the historical narrative has been contested and reclaimed.

ELL / ESOL: Primary source language (particularly 19th-century English) presents specific challenges — pre-read sources with students and pre-teach archaic or specialist vocabulary. Allow students to express historical analysis in their home language first before translating to English. Bilingual glossaries support engagement without reducing intellectual demand. Some ELL students may bring first-hand experience of colonisation from other contexts — honour these as valid comparative perspectives.

Inclusion: Decolonized history can surface difficult emotions for Māori students encountering colonial violence and injustice in the curriculum for the first time. Create a trauma-informed classroom. Neurodiverse learners benefit from chunked tasks and clear analytical scaffolds. Ensure all students understand that the purpose of this unit is not guilt but understanding — and that understanding is the foundation of partnership and change.

Mātauranga Māori lens: Decolonizing history means more than "adding Māori perspectives" — it means recognising that the dominant historical narrative itself is a colonial artefact. Whakapapa is an alternative historical framework: tracing connections, obligations, and continuity across time. The NZ Wars were not distant events — their consequences live in land ownership patterns, economic disparities, and community structures today. Tino rangatiratanga — the right of self-determination — was not surrendered at Waitangi and has been asserted continuously through protest, legislation, and resurgence. Teaching this history is an obligation of Te Tiriti partnership.

Prior knowledge: Students benefit from foundational knowledge of the Treaty of Waitangi and its context. No specialist prior knowledge required for entry-level source analysis tasks — scaffolds are provided.

Curriculum alignment