🌅 Karakia & Cultural Opening
"Kia kaha te tinana" - May the body be strong
Opening Protocol (3 minutes)
- Inclusive Movement: All bodies can move and benefit from movement - no comparison or judgment
- Exercise ≠ Punishment: Movement should feel good, not be punishment for eating or existing
- Cultural Movement: Honoring Māori & diverse cultural movement practices (haka, kapa haka, cultural dances)
🎯 Learning Intentions & Success Criteria
By the end of this lesson, ākonga will be able to:
- Explain: Why teenagers need 60+ minutes of movement daily
- Differentiate: Between aerobic, strength, and flexibility exercises
- Identify: Personal barriers to movement and realistic solutions
- Explore: Diverse movement options beyond traditional sports
- Create: Personalized weekly movement plan
Success Criteria - Ākonga will demonstrate:
- ✓ Understanding of exercise benefits for body and mind
- ✓ Knowledge of 3 types of exercise
- ✓ Experience trying 5+ different movement activities
- ✓ Identification of personal movement preferences
- ✓ Specific weekly movement plan
Kupu / Vocabulary: movement, exercise, aerobic, strength, flexibility, balance, warm-up, cool-down.
Media Anchor (8 mins)
Video: The Significance of Te Whare Tapa Whā
- Which daily routine most directly strengthens your taha tinana right now?
- How will you evaluate whether your routine change is genuinely helping?
Activity 1: Movement Spectrum (10 minutes)
Where Are You On The Movement Scale?
Physical spectrum activity + discussion🔄 Tracker Spotlight: Start with a 3-minute partner conversation using last week’s Nutrition Journal. Prompt: “How did your kai choices influence your energy for movement?” Capture two insights to connect food and exercise.
Physical Spectrum (3 minutes):
Create an imaginary line across the classroom. Students position themselves based on current activity level:
Left Side: "I rarely move beyond walking to class"
Middle: "I move some days but inconsistently"
Right Side: "I'm active most days and love it"
Quick Sharing (3 minutes):
In position, turn to someone near you and share:
- Why are you standing here?
- How do you feel about your current movement level?
- Would you like to change? Why or why not?
Debrief (4 minutes):
Teacher shares:
- No position is "wrong" - this is where you are right now
- Movement looks different for everyone - disability, chronic illness, injury, mental health all impact capacity
- Research shows teens need 60+ min of movement daily for optimal health (most NZ teens don't meet this)
- Benefits: stronger heart/lungs, better mood, improved sleep, bone/muscle development, stress relief, disease prevention
- The goal isn't to become an athlete - it's to find movement you enjoy enough to do regularly
Activity 2: Types of Exercise - The Complete Picture (12 minutes)
Understanding What Your Body Needs
Teaching + quick physical demos🏃 Aerobic (Cardio)
What: Gets heart rate up, makes you breathe harder
Benefits: Strengthens heart/lungs, burns energy, improves endurance
Examples:
- Running, swimming, biking
- Dancing, kapa haka
- Sports (netball, rugby, basketball)
- Brisk walking
Recommendation: Most of your 60 min daily
💪 Strength Training
What: Builds muscle, makes you stronger
Benefits: Bone density, metabolism, injury prevention, functional strength
Examples:
- Push-ups, sit-ups, squats
- Weight lifting
- Rock climbing
- Resistance bands
Recommendation: 3x per week
🧘 Flexibility & Balance
What: Stretches muscles, improves range of motion
Benefits: Prevents injury, reduces pain, better posture, relaxation
Examples:
- Yoga, stretching
- Tai chi
- Dance warm-ups
- Martial arts
Recommendation: Daily, especially after exercise
Quick Physical Demos (4 minutes):
Everyone stands. Try each for 20-30 seconds:
- Aerobic: March in place, then double-time!
- Strength: Wall push-ups or squats
- Flexibility: Reach for ceiling, bend to touch toes
Notice: How does your body feel? Which felt good? Which was challenging?
Activity 3: Try It! Movement Stations (20 minutes)
Explore Diverse Movement Options
Station rotations + reflectionSetup Note: Set up 6 stations around room/gym with instructions and any needed equipment. Students rotate through, spending 2.5 min at each station trying the activity.
Station 1: Bodyweight Strength
Push-ups (on knees or full), squats, planks - choose your level
Station 2: Dance Party
Play music - just dance! No rules, just move how it feels good
Station 3: Yoga Flow
Simple sequence: downward dog, warrior, tree pose, child's pose (posters with instructions)
Station 4: Cardio Blast
Jumping jacks, high knees, butt kicks - get that heart rate up!
Station 5: Māori Movement
Basic haka stance and movements, or ti rākau patterns (if culturally appropriate for teacher)
Station 6: Walking Meditation
Slow, mindful walking - focus on breath and body sensations (gentle option)
Reflection After Stations (3 minutes):
Write quick responses:
- Which station did you enjoy most? Why?
- Which was most challenging?
- Did anything surprise you?
- Which activities could you see yourself doing regularly?
Key Message: Exercise doesn't have to be competitive sports. Dance, gardening, walking the dog, playing with siblings, skateboarding - it ALL counts!
Activity 4: Barriers & Personal Movement Plan (13 minutes)
Making It Work For YOUR Life
Individual reflection + planningIdentify Your Barriers (4 minutes):
Honestly assess what gets in the way of movement for you. Common barriers:
Common Barriers:
- No time (homework, responsibilities)
- No safe spaces to move
- Self-conscious about body/ability
- Tired, low energy
- Expensive equipment/memberships
- Don't enjoy traditional sports
- Disability or chronic pain
- No one to do it with
Creative Solutions:
- Walking/biking to school counts!
- YouTube home workouts (free)
- Dance in your room
- Active video games
- Play with siblings/pets
- Garden, clean vigorously
- Modify activities for your body
- Online fitness communities
Create Weekly Movement Plan (6 minutes):
Hand out the Movement Plan Template. Model how to map one day, highlighting activity, duration, and feelings before/after. Learners complete the week (aiming for 60 min total movement per day, broken into achievable chunks):
Example Plan:
- Monday: Walk to school (15 min) + YouTube dance workout (20 min) + play basketball with friends (30 min) = 65 min ✓
- Tuesday: PE class (45 min) + walk dog (20 min) = 65 min ✓
- Wednesday: Bike to school (20 min) + kapa haka practice (60 min) = 80 min ✓
Your Turn: Plan specific activities for each day this week. Be realistic!
Share & Accountability (3 minutes):
Share your plan with a partner. Agree to check in next week and note any tweaks directly on the template.
Reminder: Progress over perfection. Even 20 minutes is better than 0 minutes. Every bit of movement counts!
Whakamutunga - Commitment & Closure (5 minutes)
Personal Commitment (2 minutes):
Write down:
- ONE movement activity you'll try this week that you've never done before OR
- ONE day this week where you'll hit 60 minutes of movement
Make it specific: "I will try a 15-minute yoga video on YouTube on Thursday evening before dinner"
Class Circle (3 minutes):
Stand in circle. Volunteers share ONE movement activity they're excited to try this week.
Closing message: Movement is a gift to yourself. It's not about changing how you look - it's about feeling strong, capable, and alive in your body. Find what brings you joy and do that!
Kete storage reminder:
Show students how to fold or save their Movement Plan Template in their hauora folders (or photograph it). Ask them to log adjustments after each movement session.
🏠 Homework / Extension
Required: Track Your Movement Plan (Week-long)
Complete one row of your Movement Plan Template each day:
- Log the movement activities and total minutes completed
- Note how you felt before and after (use the template prompts)
- Capture barriers and supports so we can troubleshoot together
- Bring the template back next lesson for our movement debrief
Optional: Interview Active Person (20 min)
Interview someone in your life who moves regularly (doesn't have to be athlete - could be gardener, dancer, dog walker!):
- What movement do you do?
- Why do you do it?
- How has it impacted your life?
- What advice would you give someone starting?
📋 Teacher Planning Snapshot
Ngā Whāinga Ako — Learning Intentions
Students will engage with this hauora resource to build holistic wellbeing knowledge, connecting te ao Māori perspectives on hauora with personal, social, and environmental dimensions of health.
Ngā Paearu Angitū — Success Criteria
- ✅ Students can explain key hauora concepts using their own words and personal examples.
- ✅ Students can connect te ao Māori frameworks (e.g. Te Whare Tapa Whā) to real wellbeing contexts.
Differentiation & Inclusion
Scaffold support: Provide sentence starters, graphic organisers, and entry-level tasks to scaffold access. Offer extension challenges for capable learners to address a range of readiness levels.
ELL / ESOL: Pre-teach key vocabulary (hauora, wairua, tinana, hinengaro, whānau). Allow students to draw or respond in their home language as a first step.
Inclusion: Hauora topics can be sensitive — create a safe learning environment. Neurodiverse learners benefit from choice in how they demonstrate wellbeing understanding. Use accessible, non-threatening language.
Curriculum alignment
- Health & Physical Education: Understand that wellbeing is a dynamic state determined by physical, social, mental/emotional, and spiritual dimensions of health.
- Social Sciences: Understand how people participate individually and collectively to support community wellbeing.