Companion Delivery Pack · Y9-10

NZ Activism Lesson Sprint

A compact teaching sequence that can run standalone or inside the full unit. Designed for quick deployment, strong source work, and clear evidence checkpoints.

Ready-to-teach sequence Primary source protocol Assessment aligned

Overview

This companion pack focuses on the most teachable movement case studies and a repeatable routine for source analysis. It is ideal when you need strong historical thinking outcomes in a shorter timeframe.

Core Lens

Activism as a strategic response to injustice, not random protest.

Skills

Perspective analysis, source reliability, and claim-evidence reasoning.

Product

Mini argumentative response or short multimedia explanation.

Link Back

All evidence can roll directly into the full unit assessment pathways.

Lesson Sequence (6 Session Sprint)

Lesson 1: What is Activism?

  • Focus: Define activism and map movement types.
  • Task: Build class timeline starter.
  • Evidence: Exit slip definition + example.
  • Full plan: Lesson 1 Foundations

Lesson 2: Parihaka

  • Focus: Non-violent resistance and mana motuhake.
  • Task: Source protocol on leadership statements.
  • Evidence: Source paragraph with claim.
  • Full plan: Lesson 2 Parihaka
  • Companion handout: Parihaka Companion

Lesson 3: Bastion Point

  • Focus: Occupation, whenua, and state response.
  • Task: Video notes + stakeholder map.
  • Evidence: Perspective contrast statement.
  • Full plan: Lesson 3 Bastion Point

Lesson 4: Springbok Tour

  • Focus: Sport, race politics, and public division.
  • Task: Cartoon/speech analysis.
  • Evidence: CER paragraph on significance.
  • Full plan: Lesson 4 Springbok Tour

Lesson 6: Climate Action Synthesis

  • Focus: Apply historical lessons to a current issue.
  • Task: Campaign concept mini-brief.
  • Evidence: 2-minute pitch + reflection.
  • Full capstone plan: Lesson 7 Campaign Lab

Source Tools

Weekly Source Protocol

  1. Who created this source?
  2. What claim is being made?
  3. What evidence supports the claim?
  4. How reliable is this for our question?

Discussion Norms

  • Critique ideas with evidence, not people.
  • Recognise that these histories are living and local.
  • Hold space for multiple informed perspectives.

Resource Kit

Kaiako Planning Snapshot

Ngā Whāinga Akoranga — Learning Intentions

  • Explain activism as a strategic response to injustice using evidence from at least two NZ movements.
  • Analyse primary sources for perspective, purpose, audience, and reliability.
  • Evaluate short-term and long-term consequences of at least one social movement.
  • Apply historical movement strategies to a contemporary civic issue.

Paearu Angitu — Success Criteria

  • I can identify who held power and how activists challenged it.
  • I can use the source protocol to analyse one primary source per lesson.
  • I can write a CER paragraph connecting claim, evidence, and reasoning.
  • I can design a campaign brief that draws on a historical strategy.

Teacher Planning Snapshot

  • Year level: Y9-10 · Social Studies + Aotearoa NZ Histories
  • Duration: 6-session sprint (3-4 weeks); designed to slot into the full 7-lesson unit or stand alone
  • Curriculum alignment: Achievement Objectives — Social Sciences 5.1 (understand how people make and contest decisions) and 5.2 (understand how historical forces shape society); Aotearoa NZ Histories strand
  • Mātauranga Māori: Tikanga-grounded discussion norms; whanaungatanga as the relational foundation for respectful inquiry into living histories
  • Entry support: Whole-class modelling of source protocol before individual practice; sentence starters in handouts
  • On-level: Structured source logs and writing frames; worked CER exemplar provided per lesson
  • Extension: Independent constitutional analysis; compare with an international movement case study; propose a policy reform pathway

Inclusion and Accessibility

  • ESOL / ELL support: Key terms pre-taught before each lesson; te reo Māori integrated with English explanations throughout
  • Accessibility: Print-ready handouts with clear visual hierarchy; simplified source extracts available on request
  • Neurodiverse learners: Predictable lesson structure (hook, source, write, exit) reduces anxiety; visual timelines support chronological reasoning
  • Scaffold removal: Begin with full writing frame, progressively remove sentence starters across lessons 3-6 as students internalise the CER structure
  • Cultural safety: These are living histories — brief Māori staff before teaching Parihaka; acknowledge local iwi connections to the movements studied

Assessment Checkpoints

Checkpoint 1

Source analysis paragraph (Lessons 2-3).

Checkpoint 2

Comparative perspective response (Lessons 4-5).

Checkpoint 3

Mini campaign brief and oral pitch (Lesson 6).

Fast Essay Path

600-800 words: why one movement mattered and what changed.

Short Documentary Path

3-4 minute narrated video with source evidence captions.

Campaign Path

Issue brief + tactic plan + rationale linked to historical precedent.