Years 9-10 · Social Studies + Aotearoa NZ Histories

NZ Activism & Social Movements

A flagship inquiry into how people in Aotearoa challenge power, protect whenua, and reshape the future. Students track strategy, consequence, and legacy from Parihaka to modern youth climate action.

Primary source rich Culturally grounded protocols Assessment ready pathways Action project included

He Aha Tēnei? — Unit Overview

Students investigate how activism in Aotearoa has shifted laws, institutions, and public consciousness. The learning emphasis is not just on events, but on strategy, power, and historical consequence.

"He aha te mea nui o te ao? He tāngata, he tāngata, he tāngata."

What is the greatest thing in the world? It is people, it is people, it is people.

Power

Who holds power in each movement, and how is that power challenged?

Tactics

What tactics are used: legal challenge, occupation, protest, media, or digital mobilisation?

Impact

What changed immediately, and what changed over generations?

Responsibility

How do historical movements shape civic responsibilities for rangatahi today?

Arc of Change — Movement Study Pathway

Each movement can be taught as a self-contained inquiry, then connected through recurring themes of whenua, sovereignty, media framing, and collective action.

1880s

Parihaka

Non-violent resistance led by Te Whiti-o-Rongomai and Tohu Kākahi to oppose land confiscation.

  • Focus: Moral authority and strategic peace
  • Concept: Mana motuhake
  • Evidence product: Source commentary paragraph
1977-1978

Bastion Point

A 506-day occupation that transformed public understanding of Māori land rights and urban activism.

  • Focus: Land justice and state response
  • Concept: Treaty obligations in practice
  • Evidence product: Timeline + perspective statement
1981

Springbok Tour

A national rupture where sport, racism, and political identity collided in public space.

  • Focus: Civil disobedience and social division
  • Concept: National identity under pressure
  • Evidence product: Photo + cartoon analysis
1980s

Nuclear-Free Aotearoa

Public mobilisation and Pacific solidarity repositioned NZ foreign policy and sovereignty narratives.

  • Focus: Local pressure, global impact
  • Concept: Diplomatic independence
  • Evidence product: Structured class debate
1970s-1990s

Māori Renaissance

Language revitalisation, media, and education movements rebuilding cultural infrastructure.

  • Focus: Revitalisation as activism
  • Concept: Cultural sovereignty
  • Evidence product: Oral history snapshot
2010s-Today

Youth Climate Action

Rangatahi-led action connecting kaitiakitanga, science evidence, and policy advocacy.

  • Focus: Intergenerational justice
  • Concept: Collective future-making
  • Evidence product: Campaign concept brief

Raupapa Akoranga — 9 Week Teaching Sequence

Weeks 1-2: Framing Activism

Build background knowledge, define activism, and create a living class timeline of movements.

Week 4: Springbok Tour 1981

Interrogate competing narratives through visual sources, speeches, and media framing.

Kōnae Akoranga Katoa — Full Lesson Plans

Each lesson below is fully teachable with explicit learning intentions, video/source anchors, step-by-step flow, assessment look-fors, and differentiation guidance.

Lesson 2 · 70 mins

Parihaka and Peaceful Resistance

Examines non-violent strategy and moral authority through Parihaka case analysis.

  • Video anchor: Parihaka / NZ Wars context
  • Output: source annotation + reflection
  • Companion handout: Parihaka Companion

Lesson 3 · 75 mins

Bastion Point Occupation

Interrogates land justice and state response through the 507-day occupation.

  • Video anchor: Bastion Point testimony
  • Output: timeline + perspective statement
  • Companion handout: Bastion Point Companion

Lesson 4 · 70 mins

Springbok Tour 1981

Uses photos and media framing to evaluate perspective, power, and national identity conflict.

  • Video anchor: 1981 tour retrospective
  • Output: visual source comparison
  • Companion handout: Springbok Companion

Lesson 5 · 70 mins

Nuclear-Free Aotearoa

Connects civic mobilisation to foreign policy shifts and NZ constitutional identity.

  • Video anchor: Nuclear-free policy history
  • Output: debate position statement
  • Companion handout: Nuclear-Free Companion

He Kōrero mā te Kaiako — Teaching Protocols

Source Interrogation Routine

Use the same four prompts each week to build transfer across all movement studies.

  1. Who produced this source and for which audience?
  2. What claim is being made?
  3. What evidence is visible and what is absent?
  4. How reliable is this source for our inquiry question?

Culturally Sustaining Practice

  • Prioritise Māori voices as knowledge holders, not side notes.
  • Treat these as living histories with current relevance to whānau and iwi.
  • Use local place names, iwi history, and community contexts wherever possible.

Dialogue Safety Protocol

  • Distinguish critique of ideas from critique of people.
  • Anchor disagreement in evidence, not personal attack.
  • Use restore-and-repair conversations when historical trauma surfaces.

High-Challenge, High-Support

  • Model one complete exemplar before independent analysis.
  • Use writing frames for claim-evidence-reasoning transitions.
  • Provide extension pathways into constitutional and policy analysis.

Kaiako Planning Snapshot

Paearu Angitu — Success Criteria

  • I can identify the strategy used by activists and explain why it was chosen.
  • I can analyse a source for audience, purpose, and reliability.
  • I can compare the short-term and long-term impact of two movements.
  • I can connect a historical movement to a contemporary civic issue.

Teacher Planning Snapshot

  • Year level: Y9-10 · Social Studies + Aotearoa NZ Histories
  • Duration: 7 lessons · 7-9 weeks
  • Achievement Objectives: Social Sciences 5.1, 5.2; Aotearoa NZ Histories strand — understanding how people make and contest decisions
  • Curriculum integration: Te Mātaiaho Social Studies, Key Competencies (thinking, participating and contributing)
  • Entry point: Students can describe a significant event; no prior movement study required
  • On-level support: Writing frames and structured source protocols for each case study
  • Extension pathways: Constitutional analysis, policy comparison, independent civic action brief

Inclusion and Accessibility

  • ESOL / ELL support: Key vocabulary pre-taught each lesson; Te Reo Māori terms woven throughout with English explanations
  • Accessibility: All handouts print-ready with clear layout; sources available in simplified and visual versions
  • Neurodiverse learners: Consistent source protocol routine across all lessons reduces cognitive load; visual timelines support sequencing
  • Cultural safety: These are living histories — consult with Māori staff and community before delivering Parihaka and Bastion Point content
  • Differentiation: Scaffold entry via whole-class modelling before independent source work; remove scaffolds progressively over the unit

Mātauranga Māori Integration

  • Tikanga and whanaungatanga — class norms built around care for one another and for the histories being studied
  • Kaitiakitanga — students as guardians of accurate historical memory, particularly for Māori communities
  • Mana motuhake — sovereignty and self-determination as the recurring conceptual thread across all movements
  • Whakapapa — connect movements chronologically to show that today's rangatahi are heirs to this lineage of action

Ngā Rauemi — Curated Resource Architecture

Aromatawai — Assessment Architecture

Phase 1: Gather

Evidence checkpoints after each movement (exit ticket + source paragraph).

Phase 2: Synthesize

Students compare two movements with a continuity/change frame.

Phase 3: Apply

Final product connects historical learning to a current issue and action pathway.

Option A: Critical Essay

900-1,100 words on significance, strategy, and consequence of one movement.

Must include: three sources, one counter-perspective, and explicit historical concept use.

Option B: Documentary Mini-Feature

5-7 minute narrated piece using voice, visuals, and evidence captions.

Must include: source attribution, timeline logic, and argument clarity.

Option C: Civic Action Campaign

Design a feasible local campaign linked to historical strategies studied in class.

Must include: stakeholder map, tactics rationale, and risk/ethics statement.

Criteria Developing Secure Advanced
Historical understanding Describes events Explains causes and consequences Evaluates significance across time
Evidence use Uses isolated examples Uses relevant sources with explanation Integrates sources critically and comparatively
Perspective Mentions one viewpoint Contrasts multiple perspectives Interrogates power and source bias
Contemporary connection Makes basic links to today Connects history to current issues clearly Proposes actionable, justified civic response

Te Ara Whakamua — Capstone Action Brief

Students produce a community-facing action brief: a realistic response to a local issue inspired by lessons from historical movements.

Investigate

  • Define issue + affected community
  • Gather local evidence (data, interviews, media)
  • Name historical movement parallels

Design

  • Select tactics (petition, event, media, submission)
  • Create key message for chosen audience
  • Plan timeline, roles, and success indicators

Present

  • Deliver to class panel or invited whānau
  • Respond to critique using evidence
  • Submit reflection on ethics and impact

Inclusive Delivery — Differentiation & Support

Scaffolded Support

  • Chunked source sets with glossary support
  • Claim-evidence-reasoning writing frames
  • Structured speaking stems for debate

Extension Pathway

  • Constitutional analysis of policy outcomes
  • Comparative study with international movements
  • Independent mini-research dossier

Accessible Expression

  • Choice of essay, oral, visual, or multimedia format
  • Visual timeline alternatives for heavy text tasks
  • Bilingual keyword walls and pronunciation support

Curriculum alignment